Provide protection

Tuesday, 3 September 2013 00:00 -     - {{hitsCtrl.values.hits}}

The British High Commission in Colombo has produced a video to advice women travellers to Sri Lanka on their safety, which while emphasising the hospitality the island is famous for also raises some pertinent points that local authorities should also be aware about. The six-minute clip gives advice on dress, behaviour, gestures, cultural differences and beach boys. It details how different Eastern and Western cultures are and gives helpful tips to avoid harassment, stares and unsafe three-wheeler drivers and how to enjoy nightlife safely. It is great news that Sri Lanka’s tourism is promoted despite such cultural gaps, but what is saddening is that these same attitudes that are hurting local women go largely disregarded by authorities. Time magazine on 13 August published the harrowing tale of thousands of children who have been abused in Sri Lanka. The well-researched article details how more and more children are being left vulnerable as increasing economic constraints push mothers towards the Middle East. Children are then easy prey for fathers or male relatives, who sometimes abuse them for years. Even once the offence is discovered and the responsible parties arrested, children often have no one to take care of them and are shuttled to Government or non-Government run juvenile centres. They then have to undergo more heartbreak and fear as a sluggish legal system mires them in years of litigation – sometimes for as long as a decade. Often, during this time, the perpetrators roam free. The Time reporter writes that every day, three to five children are raped in Sri Lanka. Police statistics show the total number of child rapes in 2011 as 1,463; the figure jumped to 1,759 cases in 2012, according to a Parliamentary report. Police records also give a total of just over 2,000 sexual offenses against children, besides rape, in 2011; child-molestation cases in 2012 soared to over 5,000, according to Parliamentary figures. The total number of all crimes against children — which besides sex crimes include crimes of violence, abduction, trafficking and other offenses — increased by a dramatic 64% between 2011 and 2012. These are mind-numbing numbers. Rampant abuse is completely swept into the shadows and while the Government has taken some steps such as establishing two courts only for child abuse cases, the Time report estimates that around 10, 000 cases are pending at all courts around the island. The culture of silence and impunity is also being seen in crimes against women. United National Party (UNP) MP Rosy Senanayake told a press conference recently that out of over 30,000 cases of harassment and sexual abuses against women, only around 600 perpetrators are remanded. This is a jaw-dropping 2%, showing the gross inefficiency of the legal system to provide justice. She observed that a woman is harassed or abused in the country every 90 minutes. Senanayake also pointed out that dozens of politicians have been implicated in sexual cases, including the famous Tangalle incident where the Pradeshya Sabha Chairman allegedly raped a Russian woman after killing her British boyfriend. This clearly does no favours for tourism. Changing male attitudes about how they treat women is clearly important. In a land that seems to revere “mothers,” it is unconscionable that women are mistreated in this gross manner and an image that shows Sri Lanka in the worst possible light.

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