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NEWS
South African children play 'rape me' games
Chris McGreal in Johannesburg
The Guardian, Thursday March 13 2008
South African schoolchildren are so affected by crime that they play
games of "rape me, rape me" and mimic robberies in the playground,
according to the country's human rights commission. In a report on
school violence published yesterday, the commission said schools were
the "single most common" site of crimes against children, such as
robbery and assault, including rampant sexual violence, some of it by
teachers.
The commission said it had identified a number of
games pupils played in response to the violence, including one in which
they pretended to rape each other. "This game demonstrates the extent
and level ... brutalisation of the youth has reached, and how endemic
sexual violence has become in South Africa," it said.
The report said that a fifth of all sexual assaults on young people
occurred at school. A survey of 1,227 female students who were victims
of sexual assault found that nearly 9% of them had been attacked by
teachers.
The commission also found that some boys committed what they called
"corrective rape" on lesbians, justifying the assault by claiming that
it would make the victims heterosexual. "There is a growing phenomenon
of corrective rape. This refers to an instance where a male learner
rapes a lesbian female learner in the belief that after such a sexual
attack the learner will no longer be lesbian," the report said.
A separate study by the Thohoyandou Victim Empowerment Programme found
that a quarter of secondary school students said that forced sexual
intercourse did not necessarily constitute rape.
The human rights commission report said that more than 40% of the young
people it interviewed had been victims of some form of crime. It
recommended that the education department consider introducing metal
detectors and fences at schools, after the Red Cross children's hospital
in Cape Town said it commonly treated school pupils who had been
assaulted with fists, knives, machetes or guns, or who had been raped.
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