Vile and Oblivious Politicians Support State Violence Against Children
At least three recent stories in Caribbean media have highlighted the systemic rape of boys and girls in state care and the horror houses known as children’s homes. Getting raped while literally under the care and protection of the state is a reprehensible violation and denial of bodily autonomy. Fleeing sexual abuse is what gets many girls in juvenile correctional facilities locked up in the first place. The abuse survivors are criminalized and re-victimized. Far from seeking to prevent sexual assault, reports from Jamaica, Trinidad and Tobago and Guyana suggest that such violations are widespread. Support services for sexual assault survivors are non-existent.
What are elected officials doing about this?
In Jamaica, the Minister responsible has branded the boys as criminals and practically blamed them for the state’s inability to offer adequate care. The media responded by laughing at the sexual assault of boys. The homophobia and heterosexism which serve to silence boys who are raped are reinforced in the reporting.
In Trinidad, three boys appeared on television to break the silence on the abuse they suffered. They appeared on the exploitative TV show, Crime Watch. Sensationalist and predatory media is the only recourse many Caribbean people feel that they have in their demand for justice.
What is to be done about these obnoxious, visionless leaders who refuse to recognize the humanity of all our children? How do we hold them accountable not only for their vile comments about children but for their lack of effective policies to ensure children are adequately cared for and kept safe?
Our politicians have the guts to call poor boys criminals, to be oblivious and insensitive towards boys who have been sexually assaulted, to call girls who report rape “children with problems” in an effort to silence them.
This is violence against children: brutal, systemic and state-sponsored.
There is so much hard work to be done in the region it makes my eyes water. We need meaningful action everywhere.
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Reblogged this on Paula Lindo.
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