PDA

View Full Version : One for the ladies



Granville
09-24-2005, 07:09 AM
S Africa 'rape trap' condemned


Anti-rape campaigners in South Africa are outraged about a new invention intended to catch rapists.
The device, designed for a woman to insert, attaches itself to a rapist and has to be surgically removed.

Its inventor says this will help in the prosecution of the rapist. Critics say the invention represents a return to the days of the chastity belt.

Some 1.5 million rapes occur in South Africa each year - one of the highest rates in the world.

"This is a medieval instrument, based on male-hating notions and fundamentally misunderstands the nature of rape and violence against women in this society," said Charlene Smith, one of South Africa's most prominent campaigners against rape.

"It is vengeful, horrible, and disgusting. The woman who invented this needs help."

'Something must be done'

The inventor of the device, Sonette Ehlers insisted she did not hate men.

"Something needs to be done, and women are crying out for me to go ahead," she told the BBC's World Today programme.

Ms Ehlers has patented the tampon-sized device, and expects it to go on sale next month.

Lisa Vetten, of the Centre for the Study of Violence and Reconciliation (CSVR) said it was "a terrifying thought that women are being made to adapt to rape by wearing these devices".

Ms Ehlers's critics argue that it would be better to educate men not to rape in the first place, rather than just to catch them after the deed.

But the inventor insisted: "I'm not an educator - I will go for those they can't educate.

Granville
09-24-2005, 07:11 AM
So what is this device, for which design Ms Ehlers was inspired after meeting a traumatised rape victim who told her, "If only I had teeth down there", all about? A medieval device built on hatred of men? Or a cheap, easy-to-use invention that could free millions of South African women from fear of rape, in a country with the world's worst sexual assault record?

"Rapex", the condom-like device bristling with internal hooks designed to snare rapists has re-ignited controversy over South Africa's alarming rape rate, even before plans for its production were announced in Western Cape this week.

The device, concealed inside a woman's body, hooks onto a rapist during penetration and must be surgically removed.

Ms Ehlers said the rape trap would be so painful for a rapist that it would disable him immediately, enabling his victim to escape; but would cause no long-term physical damage and could not injure the woman.

"I don't hate men. I love men. I have not got revenge in mind. All I am doing is giving women their power back," Ms Ehlers said. "I don't even hate rapists. But I hate the deed with a passion."

mdevour
09-25-2005, 10:18 AM
Whew!

I wager there will be a few abuses of this device, where angry wives and girl-friends use it to "punish" their partners, or women entice or entrap men out of hate. It'll be rare, since most women are not into initiating violence like that.

The scarier notion to me is what an already violent attacker will do in response to this. There'll be some rage-induced killings, I'm afraid.

Rapists may be scum, but they're not necessarily stupid. They'll learn to check first. Fat lot of comfort in that. :mad:

The long-term hope is that there will be a deterrent effect. I hope it will work. It's certainly in a good cause.

It is a bizarre world we live in.

Mike D.

joejapan
09-25-2005, 05:42 PM
.
Yep, it'll get a number of women killed.

[ 09-25-2005, 06:44 PM: Message edited by: joejapan ]

Katherine
09-25-2005, 06:57 PM
I have to agree with Joe on this.

Bob Cleek
09-25-2005, 09:38 PM
My daddy tole me dey all gots teeff down dere!