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RAPE IS A SERIOUS CRIME
By Naume Ziyambi, Windhoek
November 25, 2003 (Media Institute of Southern
Africa - Windhoek) It is high time we remove our heads from the
sand. The rape of women is a big deal! We need to stop the habit
of shrugging our collective shoulders to mean, "Oh shame it
happens, but life goes on".
Rape is a violation of women's and girl's basic human rights to
choice, liberty and security of person. It is a cruel and degrading
act.
Physical injury and disfigurement, emotional trauma, pregnancy and
sexually-transmitted infections, including HIV, are some of its
consequences that remain with the survivor for a very long time.
Thousands of women and girls also have become victims of rape.
According to research by South Africa's Medical Research Council
(MRC), about 54,000 rape cases are reported to the police every
year. This, however, is merely the tip of the ice-berg, since numerous
cases are never reported.
The explanation for these dismal statistics lies in the schizophrenic
reaction that society displays towards the rape of women. While
we do not deny that a violation has occurred, at the same time we
try to justify and explain it away.
When a woman is raped, we analyse her dress, her social habits,
whether she was in the wrong place at the wrong time, or, whether
she went willingly with the attacker. Also her sexual history -
'was she a virgin'?- becomes an open book.
Compare for a minute our reaction to a car hijacking or house break-in.
We do not ask why a man when he is robbed of his car, drove a beautiful
and tempting car. Nor do we query whether residents had locked their
front door when a break-in occurs. We immediately recognise that
a crime has been committed, which should be reported and rectified
according to the law.
We live in a sardonic situation where some of the best laws in the
world seemingly can do nothing for women. According to the MRC,
a man accused of rape has 1 in 13 chances of conviction. This raises
the question whether the new Sexual Offences Bill, which is regarded
as a great improvement to the current legislation, will make a difference.
We are all complicit in one way or another in the lack of justice
meted out to those accused of rape. We sometimes subtly transfer
the blame and shame from the perpetrator to the survivour. We wrongly
think that the onus is on women to keep themselves away from situations
that may lead to them being raped.
Communities should not be allowed to close ranks when one of their
daughters has been violated. Marrying a violated girl or young woman
off, and allowing the accuse to pay compensation or lobolo to the
father, should never replace public acknowledgement of a crime,
incarceration of the offender and hopefully at a later stage, rehabilitation.
Police, health officials and others within the system who stall
the process of justice should be fined or sentenced for their role
in discouraging the survivors from pursuing justice.
The South Africa Gender Base Violence and Health Initiative (SAGBVHI)
, a partnership of 15 organisations dealing with gender-based violence
and health issues, found in a research sample in South Africa's
nine provinces that police routinely make insensitive comments about
rape; discourage survivors from pressing charges; and, they do not
have the appropriate equipment, including transport. In the majority
of cases, the police brought incomplete rape kits to the clinic
or totally forgot to bring any kit, which hampered the collection
of evidence required for prosecution.
The research also found that 28 percent of the health workers surveyed
believe that rape is not serious or life threatening, and as a result,
they do not treat it with the urgency it deserves. Women often have
to wait for hours, usually in the general waiting rooms, to receive
medical attention.
If you get a woman who is "not bleeding heavily, then she can
wait like others in the queue" was a typical response.
But why is rape treated differently? In patriarchal societies, women's
bodies are "owned and controlled" by their fathers and
other men. Ways of demonstrating this power include the use of physical
force and coerced sex.
Boys and men also seem to be easily forgiven for their sexual wrongs
- the too common saying, 'boys will be boys' or 'men will be men',
should be struck from any language.
Changing these underlying sexist beliefs force us to rethink the
way we see social relations between men and women. These beliefs,
which supposedly underpin who we are, need to drastically change
and be replaced with more honest and rational ones where abuse of
power is not tolerated. So far, very few have had the courage to
grapple with these issues in any meaningful way.
Perhaps the fact that more men and children are raped in our societies
will eventually force us to re-evaluate our inner beliefs and the
value we place on human rights.
All of us with opportunities to influence the communities we live
and work in must recognise rape as a serious violation of women's
human rights, and force through legislation, education and awareness,
a change in the systemic sexism which is rampant in all of our institutions.
Naume Ziyambi is the Communications Officer at the Women's Health
Project in South Africa. This article is part of the Gender and
Media (GEM) Commentary Service which provides views and perspectives
on current issues.
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200311250618.html
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