12 February 2013
OPINION
SA's rape crisis: We need boots on the ground
Rhoda Kadalie says ‘femocrats'
Every year some heinous rape or gang rape perpetrated in SA goes viral across the globe. CNN comments that the rape of Anene Booysen "may be the tipping point" for this country. But just last year the world was as outraged as SA felt ashamed at the six young boys who not only gang raped a 17-year old mentally disabled girl but who also audaciously captured it on their cell phone.
Sensitive about its international image, government spokesmen routinely condemn the rapes and the men who perpetrate these barbaric acts. Upstanding citizens like Jay Naidoo makes impassioned pleas for men to stop and for society to take action. To add insult to injury, the Gender Commission adds its voice to the enraged chorus, but they do absolutely nothing to educate the public.
How many tipping points do we need? Recently Marikana was called the tipping point within the employment sector but with the constant spiralling down of our moral fabric, I no longer am shocked about what we are capable of but despair at our inability to stem the tide of this epidemic.