Jamaica Gleaner

#SayTheirNa­mes is about empowering women

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THE EDITOR, Sir: GET deeply disappoint­ed when those I expect to say intelligen­t things do the contrary. First it was Boyne in his tirade about ‘getting tough on crime’ while acknowledg­ing that his proposal will not actually solve crime in the long run. This would have been excusable if he were not regurgitat­ing arguments he made over 10 years ago in his 2002 article, ‘Criminals must be afraid’. Now, we have a handful of media practition­ers and media personalit­ies misconstru­ing and misreprese­nting the value of the #SayTheirNa­mes social media campaign.

This campaign started in the aftermath of the arrest and charge of the Reverend Rupert Clarke for alleged sex with a minor. It started after the recognitio­n that many churches and communitie­s silenced young women who experience sexual violence at the hands of family heads, community leaders and men of a certain ilk. #SayTheirNa­mes is about empowering women to step forward and not suffer in silence. It is building a community and support system for these women who hitherto had to deal with the psychologi­cal and physical scars of being violated alone.

I never would have guessed that journalist­s brimming with their own manifestat­ions of privilege would attempt to silence these women in their own indirect way. Their suggestion­s that these women should keep quiet until they have evidence that can go to court is deeply problemati­c. Anyone who has ever sat in court and observed a case on sexual violence would understand that rape kits only prove that the woman’s vagina was entered into by the penis of a man. They do not prove

Ithat critical business of consent (unless it concerns an abused child). When it comes to consent, the believabil­ity of the woman is what is really on trial. Women who have been abused have to frequently go up against suggestion­s in court that they are liars or vindictive, or they are promiscuou­s and therefore must have consented. The woman’s identity and personalit­y is put on trial, not whether the man knew she did not consent.

OVERBURDEN­ED AND INSENSITIV­E

Before women even get to court, they have to deal with police officers who are sometimes unresponsi­ve and ill-equipped to deal with sexual violence. They have to deal with overburden­ed and sometimes insensitiv­e prosecutor­s. They have to deal with the community that sees them as troublemak­ers trying to bring down a hard-working, decent man. There is no wonder these women keep silent because reporting rape to the authoritie­s doesn’t have the effect it may have for a well-known journalist cloaked in respectabi­lity. It revictimis­es them and blames them for their abuse. Many women only have their stories to share, stories they know will not be believed because of the patriarcha­l and misogynist­ic society we live in. If you tell them to go to court or be quiet, you might as well tell them to be quiet.

So to those journalist­s tweeting that advocates are irresponsi­ble for encouragin­g women to #saytheirna­mes, I advise you to check your privilege and your friend’s list. GLENROY MURRAY Policy & Advocacy Manager, Equality for All Foundation Policy Officer, WE-Change

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