(Jwplayer)

May 15, 2016

#MabelJansen: Formal report from statistician-general Pali Lehohla: "Sexual violence remains prevalent, especially among black South Africans"





"Sexual violence remains prevalent, especially among black South Africans, and was the invisible hand in the vicious crimes committed in households, particularly against women", said statistician-general Pali Lehohla when introducing the annually-published South African Police Service's crime statistics.

■ Read entire report on  http://praag.org/
■ ALSO: "Black females not safe in their own homes'' - http://city-press.news24.com/News/women-are-not-safe-in-their-own-homes-20160508 --


Formal report from statistician-general Pali Lehohla: "Sexual violence remains prevalent, especially among black South Africans"

... and was the invisible hand in the vicious crimes committed in households, particularly against women, "
"Sexual violence remains prevalent, especially among black South Africans, and was the invisible hand in the vicious crimes committed in households, particularly against women, said Statistician-General Pali Lehohla.
“The way we see crime in South Africa says a lot about our inequalities. The issue of inequality is especially high among blacks and we see that the crimes committed are closely related to this. The faces of crime victims are single women in homes of three or four people,” he explained.
He was referring to findings of a survey of victims of crime released by his office during the week, which identified women as the face of victims of heinous crimes, but most unfortunately this often happens within the walls of their homes.
In most cases, these women pointed out that the crimes committed against them were done so by people they were in relationships with or who they were familiar with.
It also found that black women were assaulted in their homes, often assaulted and sexually abused by people known to them, and that these assaults took place as a result of anger towards a family/person.
Lehohla told City Press on Saturday that the study was particularly important in assisting the country to identify and then confront several challenges, including a lack of development in education, to issues of unemployment and to housing, etc.
Deekay Sibanda programmes officer at The One in Nine Campaign said that the findings presented nothing new, but rather frustrating and traumatising truths.
“Women are not safe in their own homes, own communities, own churches, own spaces and in their own country. For example, women are told not to walk at night, they must stay at home for their own safety, but this statement is wrong in so many ways. For me it doesn’t matter whether the [abuses and victimisation] happen in their homes or community. Abuse is abuse.”
A police officer from Hillbrow Police Station, who asked not to be named, acknowledged that there were lots of these kinds of crimes (domestic related) in his policing environment.
Unfortunately, a challenge was that there was no way police stations could effectively place a police officer in people’s homes to prevent or thwart these abuses.
“Most women go about their lives believing that 'it is okay for their men to beat them'. The system is not designed to help what is in the head. We can only remove you from such a situation physically,” he explained.
Dr Kelley Moult of the Gender, Health and Justice Research Unit at the University of Cape Town said female survivors often reported that “their rights felt less protected than the rights of those who have offended”.
Sibanda said that in spite of progress being made, the law continued to fail victims of abuse of any kind.
“The justice system is so useless and pointless because it does not support, affirm, nor does it respect women. What’s the use of having laws if they are exclusionary to women?” she lamented, adding that women got secondary victimisation when reporting their cases instead, and were often blamed.
“Lots of women have had law enforcement ask them what they had done for things leading to reporting a crime,” she said.
The police officer also explained that things like restraining orders meant to assist victims of abuse were only good in some instances, but not always.
“What is a restraining order but a piece of paper. It is not body armour. It is like getting a traffic ticket, which you may or may not pay,” he said.
He said part of a challenge within the family structure was that families of victims often held family meetings and sought to convince the victims to withdraw charges on the grounds the women would not be able to support themselves financially if the breadwinners were to be convicted and sentenced, and if they were to decide to separate from their partners.
While the figure of 40% of sexual offences occurring at home seemed shocking, experts say it was not even reflecting an accurate picture, given that most victims often opted not to report the crimes. The real figure may be significantly higher.
The survey found KwaZulu-Natal to be the most prevalent for cases of assault followed by the Western Cape and Eastern Cape.
Despite the shocking stats, Lehohla said that the only good news read out of the stats was that at least there was no upward trend in these crimes.
“There is a public perception that crime in South Africa is on the rise, but that is not the case. It is in fact stabilising, even though it is vicious and concerning,” Lehohla said.
https://www.censorbugbear.org/farmitracker/reports/view/4368

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My mother is not a racist!


Lulu Qulu (28) is Judge Mabel Jansen’s adopted daughter 
‘I’m standing by her no matter how people condemn me. She is my mother and I know what is in her heart,” says Lulu Qulu (28), the daughter of Judge Mabel Jansen’s domestic worker, Sibongile, who she legally adopted and raised in her home.
The two black women have closed ranks around their “mother”, Judge Jansen, after she was accused of racism, saying she is “not a racist”.
“On Mother’s Day my message was first on her Facebook page. I wrote to her that ‘she is the best mother in the whole world’.”
“When the race bombshell about her remarks on Facebook dropped, barely an hour later, I was in a state. Ever since I’ve been upset and deeply hurt by the rude words snarled at her,” said Qulu.
Her cousin Nana Sithole (45), who together with her mother Lena and son Thabang, lived with Jansen for more than six years, said May, as she fondly calls Judge Jansen, is also like a mother to her.
“I know her heart. She may have put something wrongly but that doesn’t make her a bad person. Everyone makes mistakes but only God can judge us,” said Sithole.
The past week has been hell for Jansen’s loved ones following the storm around the once-respected judge whose integrity was everything to her – and hours after she heard her husband had died behind the wheel of his car in Britain.
He had been working for three months at a time as an orthodontist in England over a period of time. But Jansen hasn’t been able to arrange his funeral.
Since the journalist and activist Gillian Schutte decided to make personal messages that Jansen sent to her a year ago public, the judge has been getting death threats. She was too scared to leave her house, said Qulu.
The judge deleted her Facebook page to protect her family and friends. She only answers her phone if she knows the calling number. A friend gave her a step-by-step guide on how to survive an attack on social media. It reads: “Don’t get into a panic, don’t try to explain yourself, don’t apologise and don’t allow yourself to be isolated.”
Qulu added: “I’ve known her for 28 years. My room is in between her two daughters’ rooms, she put me through school and university and I enjoyed the same pocket money, extramural activities and overseas vacations as them [her children]. My biological mother also came along. Read more http://city-press.news24.com/News/judge-jansen-loving-mum-or-racist-20160514

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■ #MabelJansen: So it's now racist in South Africa to refer to rape & African customs; Its also genocide under the UN to try to destroy a culture...

 Instead of crying “racist”, all Gillian Schutte had to do was ask herself how SA became the rape capital of the world or ask Sipho Singiswa, her black MK terrorist husband, what uKuthwala is

#StopWhiteGenocideInSA