Khaleej Times

Gabon students battle sex-for-grades stress

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libreville — In Gabon, they’re called “sexually transmitte­d grades” — when university teachers use the threat of giving low marks in order to coerce female students into providing sexual favours.

“He started coming on to me. I began refusing him, refusing and refusing... until the day when he gave me zero for my main piece of work,” Melanie told.

Another student said that she was forced to switch courses after she rejected the advances of a teacher who had “made my life hell.”

Like many people around the world, female students at Libreville’s Omar Bongo university have followed the saga of sexual harassment surroundin­g Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein. These young women may lack the media draw of glamorous actresses who are stepping into the TV lights — but they have tales of male power and sexual intimidati­on that are hauntingly familiar.

Sexual coercion at university and high schools has for decades fed the “kongossa”, as the rumour mill is known in this central African state. Student leader Franck Matoundou said he had brought the problem of sexual predation to the attention of the educationa­l authoritie­s. Responding to AFP, university administra­tive staff point to the difficulty of clearly proving cases of sexual harassment by teachers.

They also argue that students should lodge formal complaints through their department heads.

Gabonese law provides for charges of sexual harassment by “any person occupying a hierarchic­al post” and President Ali Bongo himself has denounced a problem “that is growing in scale and which demotivate­s competent people.”

Yet not a single teacher has been tried over the sex-for-grades bribery, according to official sources including the state prosecutor.

Valery Mimba, head of the Iberian Studies department, says the problem of sexual harassment “does exist,” although hearsay and scandal-mongering make it hard to assess the scale of the phenomenon and deal with it.—

 ?? AFP ?? Sexual coercion at universiti­es and high schools has for decades fed the ‘kongossa’, as the rumour mill is known in this central African state. —
AFP Sexual coercion at universiti­es and high schools has for decades fed the ‘kongossa’, as the rumour mill is known in this central African state. —

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