Posts tagged rape
4:43 pm - Thu, May 10, 2012

This article is definitely one of the more disturbing articles I’ve read in a long time. I was completely flabbergasted, and yet I wasn’t all that surprised.

9:57 am - Wed, Feb 8, 2012
20 notes

Statistics are notoriously slippery, but the figures that suggest that violence has been disappearing in the United States contain a blind spot so large that to cite them uncritically, as the major papers do, is to collude in an epic con. Uncounted in the official tallies are the hundreds of thousands of crimes that take place in the country’s prison system, a vast and growing residential network whose forsaken tenants increasingly bear the brunt of America’s propensity for anger and violence.

Crime has not fallen in the United States—it’s been shifted. Just as Wall Street connived with regulators to transfer financial risk from spendthrift banks to careless home buyers, so have federal, state, and local legislatures succeeded in rerouting criminal risk away from urban centers and concentrating it in a proliferating web of hyperhells. The statistics touting the country’s crime-reduction miracle, when juxtaposed with those documenting the quantity of rape and assault that takes place each year within the correctional system, are exposed as not merely a lie, or even a damn lie—but as the single most shameful lie in American life.

From 1980 to 2007, the number of prisoners held in the United States quadrupled to 2.3 million, with an additional 5 million on probation or parole. What Ayn Rand once called the “freest, noblest country in the history of the world” is now the most incarcerated, and the second-most incarcerated country in history, just barely edged out by Stalin’s Soviet Union. We’re used to hearing about the widening chasm between the haves and have-nots; we’re less accustomed to contemplating a more fundamental gap: the abyss that separates the fortunate majority, who control their own bodies, from the luckless minority, whose bodies are controlled, and defiled, by the state.

Before this year, the federal government had never bothered to estimate the actual number of rapes that occur in prisons. Its data relied on official complaints filed by prisoners, which in recent years have averaged around 800. One such complaint was filed in 1995 by Rodney Hulin, a boy from Amarillo, Texas, who had been arrested as a 15-year-old after throwing a Molotov cocktail into a pile of garbage. The trash burned, causing about $500 worth of damage to the exterior of an adjacent house. Hulin’s prank was unimpressive, but Texas in the mid-’90s had little tolerance for teenage ruffianism; in 1994, George W. Bush had become governor, defeating Ann Richards, a popular incumbent, by depicting her as soft on crime. Hulin was charged with two counts of second-degree arson. He was a small guy—just five feet tall and 125 pounds—but he got a big sentence: eight years in adult prison.

Within a month of arriving at Clemens Unit, a temporary holding facility outside Houston for juveniles on their way to adult prison, Hulin was raped by another inmate. He asked to be moved out of harm’s way, but his request was denied, and the rapes continued. In a letter to prison authorities, he wrote, “I might die at any minute. Please sir, help me.” Help was not forthcoming: getting raped was not deemed urgent enough to meet the requirements of the prison’s emergency grievance criteria. When Hulin got his mother to complain to the prison’s warden, she was told that Hulin needed to “grow up” and “learn to deal with it.”

Hulin’s method for dealing with it was to kill himself. Ten weeks after his arrival, he was discovered dangling from the ceiling of his cell.

(Source: azspot)

7:07 pm - Mon, Jan 2, 2012
7 notes

An incredibly disturbing research study shows most people can’t distinguish between quotes found in some men’s magazines and interviews with convicted rapists.

7:25 pm - Wed, Dec 28, 2011
393 notes
inothernews:

A rape victim in Mogadishu.  From the New York Times, a sickening story of the alarming rise in sexual assaults against women and girls in war- and famine-torn Somalia:

Somalia has been steadily worn down by decades of conflict and chaos,  its cities in ruins and its people starving. Just this year, tens of  thousands have died from famine, with countless others cut down in  relentless combat. Now Somalis face yet another widespread terror: an  alarming increase in rapes and sexual abuse of women and girls. 
 The Shabab militant group, which presents itself as a morally righteous  rebel force and the defender of pure Islam, is seizing women and girls  as spoils of war, gang-raping and abusing them as part of its reign of  terror in southern Somalia, according to victims, aid workers and United Nations officials. Short of cash and losing ground, the militants are also  forcing families to hand over girls for arranged marriages that often  last no more than a few weeks and are essentially sexual slavery, a  cheap way to bolster their ranks’ flagging morale. 
 But it is not just the Shabab. In the past few months, aid workers and  victims say, there has been a free-for-all of armed men preying upon  women and girls displaced by Somalia’s famine, who often trek hundreds  of miles searching for food and end up in crowded, lawless refugee camps  where Islamist militants, rogue militiamen and even government soldiers  rape, rob and kill with impunity. 
 With the famine putting hundreds of thousands of women on the move —  severing them from their traditional protection mechanism, the clan —  aid workers say more Somali women are being raped right now than at any  time in recent memory. In some areas, they say, women are being used as  chits at roadblocks, surrendered to the gunmen staffing the barrier in  the road so that a group of desperate refugees can pass. 
 “The situation is intensifying,” said Radhika Coomaraswamy, the United  Nations’ special representative for children and armed conflict. All the  recent flight has created a surge in opportunistic rapes, she said, and  “for the Shabab, forced marriage is another aspect they are using to  control the population.” 

(Photo: Sven Torfinn / The New York Times)

inothernews:

A rape victim in Mogadishu.  From the New York Times, a sickening story of the alarming rise in sexual assaults against women and girls in war- and famine-torn Somalia:

Somalia has been steadily worn down by decades of conflict and chaos, its cities in ruins and its people starving. Just this year, tens of thousands have died from famine, with countless others cut down in relentless combat. Now Somalis face yet another widespread terror: an alarming increase in rapes and sexual abuse of women and girls.

The Shabab militant group, which presents itself as a morally righteous rebel force and the defender of pure Islam, is seizing women and girls as spoils of war, gang-raping and abusing them as part of its reign of terror in southern Somalia, according to victims, aid workers and United Nations officials. Short of cash and losing ground, the militants are also forcing families to hand over girls for arranged marriages that often last no more than a few weeks and are essentially sexual slavery, a cheap way to bolster their ranks’ flagging morale.

But it is not just the Shabab. In the past few months, aid workers and victims say, there has been a free-for-all of armed men preying upon women and girls displaced by Somalia’s famine, who often trek hundreds of miles searching for food and end up in crowded, lawless refugee camps where Islamist militants, rogue militiamen and even government soldiers rape, rob and kill with impunity.

With the famine putting hundreds of thousands of women on the move — severing them from their traditional protection mechanism, the clan — aid workers say more Somali women are being raped right now than at any time in recent memory. In some areas, they say, women are being used as chits at roadblocks, surrendered to the gunmen staffing the barrier in the road so that a group of desperate refugees can pass.

“The situation is intensifying,” said Radhika Coomaraswamy, the United Nations’ special representative for children and armed conflict. All the recent flight has created a surge in opportunistic rapes, she said, and “for the Shabab, forced marriage is another aspect they are using to control the population.”

(Photo: Sven Torfinn / The New York Times)

12:23 pm - Thu, Jul 7, 2011
1,044 notes

thepoliticalnotebook:

Mother Jones just posted a fabulous piece by Adam Weinstein about the military’s gender problem, a problem made evident by the military’s rape problem. This is a piece of an old post of mine about military sexual trauma that I posted in connection to a case that has recently arisen about rape…

10:47 am - Fri, Jun 24, 2011
28 notes

“A series of dramatic letters written by prisoners and families of imprisoned activists allege that authorities are intentionally facilitating mass rape and using it as a form of punishment.”

3:33 pm - Wed, Jun 22, 2011
383 notes

nprfreshair:

To reclaim their “honor,” families in Syria have been known to kill raped female members. Even if families allow such women to live, they are not eligible to marry.

“We sat and discussed that we want to change this. We don’t want to change just the regime in Syria, but also this kind of stuff. So we will marry them in front of everyone,” said Ibrahim Kayyis, a 32-year-old baker from Jisr al-Shugour.

 

(via thepoliticalnotebook)

4:57 pm - Thu, May 26, 2011
485 notes

inothernews:

This is a fucking outrage.  OUTRAGE.

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