Dramatic Need — Dramatic Need supports 16 Days of Activism for No...

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Dramatic Need supports 16 Days of Activism for No Violence Against Women and Children

Between 25 November (The International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women 2018) and 10 December (Human Rights Day), the South African government (amongst others) marks 16 Days of Activism for No Violence Against Women and Children. This campaign aims to raise awareness of the ubiquity of violence within households and intimate contexts, which in South Africa is primarily directed against children and against women, female-identifying and non-binary individuals.  Dramatic Need works with many vulnerable adults and children using arts-based advocacy and community theatre to build awareness, self-confidence and help them to speak out against abuse and abusers. We also work with boys and young men to encourage them to better communicate and to express their anger and frustrations in a non-violent way. This form of psychosocial care is crucial if intimate partner violence is to be obliterated in future generations.

In support of all those who are vulnerable to domestic, intimate and carer-inflicted violence,  we will be posting short videos of individuals from all walks of life, from all round the world, highlighting the appalling extent of this problem in South Africa . Please share these videos with people you love. It’s time for awareness and it’s time for change.

We acknowledge that gender-based violence exists in all communities, amongst all genders and affects both trans and cis-gendered people. Gender-based violence and violence towards minors, of any form, are abhorrent and we stand in solidarity with those who have experienced it, whatever their gender or age, wherever they are in the world.

In these videos we have done our best to use reliable and verifiable statistics. Where statistics were not measured within the last two years we have specifically mentioned this fact. Sexual violence and rape statistics are difficult to accurately measure due to low levels of reporting and the intimacy of the crime.

STATISTIC SOURCES:

South Africa’s femicide rate is 5 times higher than the global rate. A woman is killed every 4 hours in South Africa, with one every 8 hours classified as an intimate femicide. This is the murder of a woman at the hands of their current or ex-husband or boyfriend, same sex partner or rejected would-be lover.

https://ewn.co.za/2017/07/13/fact-check-femicide-in-sa-3-numbers-on-the-murder-of-women

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Almost 8% of South African men think it is acceptable to hit a woman if she argues with him

6% (Around 1.18 million) South African men think it’s acceptable to hit a woman if she goes out without telling him.

South Africa has one of the highest incidences of rape in the world

http://www.statssa.gov.za/publications/Report-03-40-05/Report-03-40-05June2018.pdf

41 percent of rapes in South Africa are committed against children

In 2014/15, there were 15 520 child rapes reported. Only 1799 ended up in successful convictions. In 2015/16, 16 389 were reported. Just 2 488 were convicted.

In 2016/17, the numbers rose even further to 19 071. Thankfully, there was a small improvement in convictions; 6 366 were convicted.

https://www.thesouthafrican.com/rape-statistics-41-children/

In 2017/18, a total of 50,108 sexual offences were recorded by the police, up from 49,660 in 2016/17. The majority of the sexual offences recorded were rapes.

https://africacheck.org/factsheets/factsheet-south-africas-crime-statistics-for-2017-18/