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JUSTICE FOR ANATHI ENTLE

JUSTICE FOR ANATHI ENTLE



WATCH VIDEO OF AN ABUSIVE MAN WHO BEAT UP HIS PREGNANT GIRLFRIEND AND FORCED HER TO GIVE HIM A BL0W J0B NOT KNOWING SHE WAS SECRETLY RECORDING


I don’t think any of us were prepared for what we saw.

A pregnant woman, crying, shaking, in pain — not performing, not acting, not exaggerating — just trying to survive. Her voice wasn’t loud with anger. It was small, cracked, exhausted. She wasn’t asking for much. Just help. Just to be taken to the hospital. Just to be safe.

Instead, she was met with cruelty.

The man who hurt her  the father of the child she carries  did not show concern or care. He showed power. He showed control. He showed how violence doesn’t always come with shouting and fists alone, but with threats, fear, and humiliation that trap a person inside their own body.

And the most painful part?

She had to convince him she would stay because of fear,she feared he might end her life. He had been beating her up for the longest time and she has had enough.


leaving, in that moment, felt more dangerous than staying.That is what abuse looks like when it’s real.


People often ask why victims don’t leave, without realising that sometimes the act of staying is not love — it is self-preservation. When someone has already beaten you, threatened you, and stripped away your sense of safety, your mind shifts into survival mode. You say what you must say. You promise what you must promise. You do whatever keeps the next blow from coming.


Anathi did not fail herself.

The system failed her.

Society failed her.

And the man who was supposed to protect her chose violence instead.


There is a cruel myth that pregnancy softens men. That a baby makes things better. But for many women, pregnancy makes things worse. It increases vulnerability. It tightens the grip of control. It turns love into a weapon.


Harming a pregnant woman is not just an attack on her body — it is an attack on her future, her dignity, and the life growing inside her.


As the video spread, so did our collective heartbreak and rage. And while anger is justified, we must be careful not to turn her suffering into something to consume and scroll past. Justice is not shares. Justice is not comments filled with shock emojis. Justice is action. Justice is protection. Justice is accountability.


Justice for Anathi means she gets medical care without fear.

It means she gets to live without being threatened.

It means the person who hurt her is held responsible — not excused, not defended, not hidden behind “relationship issues.”


This story hurts because it is not rare.

There are women who never go live. Women who never get believed. Women whose pain never trends. And some of them do not survive long enough for justice to even be discussed.


So if this story moved you, don’t let it end in tears alone.


Speak up — responsibly.

Protect victims — fiercely.

Stop asking what she did wrong.

Start asking why violence keeps finding protection.


**Justice for Anathi Entle 💜**

Not tomorrow. Not eventually.

Now.

Full story video by Anathi