17 Mar 2009

Lesbians in South Africa face rising threat of ''corrective rape''

A shocking report by ActionAid has revealed that not only lesbian women in South Africa are being raped by men who believe it will "cure" them of their sexual orientation, the crimes have gone unrecognised by the state and unpunished by the legal system.

ActionAid, an international anti-poverty NGO, has released an 11-page report titled Hate Crimes: the rise of corrective rape in South Africa on Mar 12 alleging that authorities in South Africa are essentially ignoring the issue even though more than 30 murders of lesbian women have been reported in the last decade.

The report, which is backed by the South African Human Rights Commission, is calling for South Africa's criminal justice system to recognise hate crimes, including corrective rape, as a separate crime category and condemns the culture of impunity around these crimes.

Although South Africa has one of the world's most progressive constitutions and became the first country in Africa to allow gay marriage in 2006, homosexuality is still widely frowned upon and same-sex unions are often decried as "un-African."

Last year, the brutal gang-rape and murder of Eudy Simelane - an out lesbian, equality rights campaigner and former star of South Africa's acclaimed Banyana Banyana national female football squad - threw a spotlight on the issue. According to reports, Simelane's body was found in a creek in a park in Kwa Thema, on the outskirts of Johannesburg. She was brutally beaten before being stabbed 25 times in the face, chest and legs.

Hate Crimes: the rise of corrective rape in South Africa report (PDF)


Video of South African victims of "corrective rape" describing the terror and men who think that rape will "cure" lesbians of their sexual orientation
WARNING: Some viewers may find the contents of this video disturbing



ActionAid report
Hate Crimes: the rise of corrective rape in South Africa

"Corrective" rape survivors interviewed by ActionAid for the report Hate Crimes: the rise of corrective rape in South Africa, said that verbal abuse from their attackers before and during the rape included them "teaching us a lesson" and "showing us how to be real women and what a real man tasted like." The research was carried out in conjunction with ActionAid partners People Opposed to Women Abuse (POWA), Treatment Action Campaign (TAC) and the Lesbian and Gay Equality Project (LGEP).

Support groups say that rape is fast becoming the most widespread hate crime targeted against gay women in townships across South Africa.

One lesbian and gay support group says it is dealing with 10 new cases of lesbian women being targeted for "corrective" rape every week in Cape Town alone.

Zanele Twala, Director of ActionAid South Africa, said: "So-called 'corrective' rape is yet another grotesque manifestation of violence against women, the most widespread human rights violation in the world today. These crimes continue unabated and with impunity, while governments simply turn a blind eye."

Thirty one lesbian women have been reported murdered in homophobic attacks since 1998. But support groups stress that because hate crimes on the basis of sexual orientation are not recognised in the South African criminal justice system, the actual number of women killed is likely to be much higher.

The murderers are walking free. Of the 31 cases, only two have ever made it to the South African courts and there has been only one conviction.

Tsidi, a hate crime survivor from Cape Town said: "Here in South Africa you have judges sending women to jail for stealing a loaf of bread to feed her baby, but men who gang rape women, who murder lesbians... they walk the streets as free men."

South Africa has one of the most progressive constitutions in the world, guaranteeing the rights of gay and lesbian people. However, the South African legal system has not caught up. Hate crimes on the basis of sexual orientation are not recognised by South African law and the courts refuse to recognise that it plays any part in these cases. The police are reluctant to investigate hate crimes against lesbian women and there is inadequate support for the survivors.

One lesbian woman said: "We get insults every day, beatings if we walk alone, you are constantly reminded that... you deserve to be raped, they yell, if I rape you then you will go straight, that you will buy skirts and start to cook because you will have learnt how to be a real woman.

"It is clear that the South African government must put a stop to these crimes against women and fulfil the promises of the constitution. Worldwide, it is utterly unacceptable that millions of women and girls live daily in fear of their lives. The international community have a duty to address violence against women as the most serious threat to security in the world today," Ms Twala said.

South Africa