Sowetan

Disabled women a target for rapists

Deaf woman relays her horrific gang-rape story

- By Alex Patrick

“We want to see if you cry. We want to know if you can scream.”

That was allegedly the reason given by five men who gang-raped a deaf woman. Her story was one of many told by disabled women in a report launched yesterday evening in Johannesbu­rg. The investigat­ion into gender-based violence risk factors for women with disabiliti­es was conducted by the Hlanganisa Institute for Developmen­t in Southern Africa (Hidsa) through the Joint Gender Fund.

The raped woman’s friend, a teacher at a school for the deaf in Gauteng, relayed her horrific story.

She said the men had often seen her friend walking in the street and were angered that she would not respond to their catcalls.

“They were like, ‘this one will not even be able to tell anyone’, and they went and raped her. Five men.” The woman claimed her friend reported the incident to the police but they couldn’t understand her, so a case was never opened.

In SA, women with disabiliti­es are twice as likely to become victims of sexual abuse, rape and intimate partner violence, and are also more psychologi­cally vulnerable than non-disabled women, the report said.

The study found women with visual impairment­s and those with mental challenges were much more at risk than women with other forms of disabiliti­es.

“The assumption made was that those with a visual impairment would not be able to identify perpetrato­rs and those with mental challenges may not remember what could have happened,” according to report author Dr Sisa Ngabaza, lecturer at the department of women and gender studies at the University of the Western Cape. Data was collected through focus groups and interviews with women living with different disabiliti­es in Gauteng, KwaZulu-Natal, the Eastern Cape, Limpopo and the Western Cape in September. The study also found women with albinism were vulnerable t o sexual abuse by males “who believe that sex with a person with albinism will bring them wealth. “At the same time, women with disabiliti­es are vulnerable to sexual abuse because some men may want to satisfy sexual fantasies by having sex with them,” Ngabaza said.

She said there were very few studies that explored gender-based violence among disabled women in SA, “but a study in Spain found that three in 10 women with disabiliti­es were abused by their partner”.

A common feature that exposed these women to risk was isolation and neglect by family members.

In SA, stigma caused some families to keep these women hidden from their communitie­s.

This “locking up” was generally considered a protective measure but women with disabiliti­es saw this practice by families as abusive and potentiall­y risky, since it attracted particular­ly male perpetrato­rs who targeted the isolated and vulnerable women, Ngabaza said.

The study also found many women became financiall­y dependent on men because it was especially hard for them to get jobs.

A disabled KZN woman quoted in the report said many disabled women felt “grateful” if they found ablebodied partners.

The research found women with disabiliti­es often found it difficult to report perpetrato­rs because they were often people close to them, like family.

Women who did try to report perpetrato­rs were often let down again by the justice system, the report claimed. The women “felt that the biggest challenge with the police was that they did not take them seriously or give them the attention accorded people without disabiliti­es”, Ngabaza said.

‘ ‘ We want to see if you cry. We want to know if you scream

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