Friday 17 January 2014

Alarming Statistics: Rape Cases On The Rise


Statistics on rape incidents may still not be a good reflection of the extent of the crime. Stigmatisation of rape victims keeps the numbers low, a further armoury to the criminals.
In the United States where about 80,000 cases of rape were reported to the police from 2004 to 2010, according to United Nations data, US Justice and Department estimates 300,000 American women are raped annually, and the Centre for Disease Control says 1.3 million.
The 678 cases the Lagos State Police Command said it recorded between March 2012 and March 2013, should be seen as numbers: unreported rape cases are on the increase. More alarming is that the epidemic affects underage persons. The media are replete with reports of young girls sexually violated, as young as three months.
From other States, cases are making the news daily. The young, the elderly and even babes are assaulted. According to a 2009 study in Clinical Psychology Review, in 65 studies from 22 countries, the highest prevalence rate of child sexual abuse was in Africa (34.4 per cent).

Most child sexual abuse is by men. About 30 per cent are the child’s relatives – brothers, fathers, uncles or cousins – about 60 per cent are other acquaintances such as ‘friends’ of the family, babysitters,or neighbours; strangers are offenders in about 10 per cent of child sexual abuse cases, the studies revealed.
Section 353 of the Criminal Code Act treats rape discriminately. While unlawful and indecent assault of a male person is felony punishable by three years imprisonment, Section 360 of the Act regards indecent assault of a woman, a misdemeanour, with two years’ imprisonment.
More obstacles – the law expects collaborated evidence of a witness for a crime committed mostly secretly. If the case survives these encumbrances, unlawful carnal knowledge of a girl of or above 13 years and under 16 years of age or of a woman or girl who is an idiot or imbecile is punishable by two years’ imprisonment. The law never punishes rape of younger people.
The National Assembly should hasten the passage of the bill before it. A section of the bill reads, “Any man convicted of rape is liable to life imprisonment. Persons convicted of gang-raping any victim shall be liable, jointly and severally, to a minimum of 20 years imprisonment without an option of fine; where the offender is less than 14 years, he shall be liable to a maximum of 14 years imprisonment and a minimum of 12 years, without an option of fine.”
Society should stop blaming rape victims. Rape is a crime, the long walk to minimising it starts with rapists facing stringent punishments rather than excusing their aberration.

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