I a running short on time these days and it's quite late at night already. ButIt would be medieval and stupid to repay in kind, so why is escalating the punishment not? Or do you believe death as not escalating the punishment? Would it be a softer punishment then?
Why is it that people support the rights of the rapist? Previous neglect? Could you give examples of this circumstance where the rapist is given more rights than the victim?
Also could you explain how victims have a bigger stigma than rapists?
you may google the actual states world over- the crime rate+ conviction rates and implications for victims.
I can however give one example:
In many countries victims are forced to marry the rapist if he agrees
These include Venezuela in Latin America, Indonesia in Asia, Cameroon and Chad in Africa, and Denmark and Russia in Europe. Despite a common perception of Scandinavian countries being progressive in their human rights policies, a 2011 Amnesty International report indicates that Denmark’s legislation “provides that if the perpetrator enters into or continues a marriage or registered partnership with the victim after the rape, it gives grounds for reducing or remitting the punishment.”
In the Arab world, at least Algeria, Iraq, Syria, Tunisia, Lebanon, Bahrain, Kuwait, Jordan, and the Occupied Palestinian Territories, to which Jordanian law applies, have similar laws as well.
“I suspect every Arab country has such an article in its criminal code,” Lama Abu-Odeh, professor of comparative and foreign law at Georgetown Law, told WMC’s Women Under Siege. “Most criminal codes in the Arab world have been copied from each other with minor variations,” she explained.
Egypt repealed a law in 1999 that allowed rapists to walk free if they married their victim, and Ethiopia repealed a similar law as recently as 2005. According to Samer Muscati, a women’s rights researcher at Human Rights Watch, Libya also gives its judges the discretion to facilitate marriage between rapists and victims. When asked whether the Libyan revolution has changed this ability, Muscati said he believes that judges can still exercise it, though he is not aware of a case since the revolution in which this particular judicial discretion was used.
Indeed, in Libya and elsewhere, judicial and customary practices may allow rapists to marry their victims even when the letter of the law does not. Legal codes alone do not indicate how prevalent the practice truly is. Law enforcement agencies may pressure women to marry their attackers rather than press charges. For example, in Eritrea, according to a 2011 State Department human rights report, authorities often respond to rape reports by encouraging the rapist to marry the victim. And pressure from authorities can go a long way.
In India, a terrible parallel to Filali’s story played out in December 2012: A 17-year-old girl committed suicide after being gang-raped. Prior to her death, police had refused to register her complaint and had pressured her to marry one of her attackers. Although the officers in that case were later punished, their actions betray the dangerous bias that governments and their agencies have against rape survivors—regardless of what policies are in place.
And in Afghanistan, custom plays a large role. This was apparent in the case of a woman named Gulnaz who became pregnant after a man raped her—and who was then herself imprisoned for adultery. Her case, and the fact that a victim can be jailed for the crime she had to endure, gained international attention in December 2011, when President Hamid Karzai agreed to release Gulnaz. Although the BBC reported that her release was not on the condition that she marry her attacker, she told reporters that she may end up marrying him anyway, pressured by tradition.
While that tradition may be tied to religion, said Judith Tucker, a professor of Arab studies at Georgetown University and the author of Women, Family, and Gender in Islamic Law, it “doesn’t really have a root in the schools of Islamic law.”
Still, back in Morocco, where the young Filali was forced to marry her rapist, religion may have played a role. According to Nada Rifki, a Moroccan women’s rights activist and writer for GlobalGirl Media, a nonprofit that trains teenage girls around the world in journalism, “Most of the men in our very patriarchal Muslim society will never marry a woman who was touched by another man.”
“Since I was a child,” Rifki said, “I was taught that, along with all the other girls in my society.”
Because of the shame associated with rape, she explained, many Moroccans consider marriage to one’s rapist the only viable solution for a victim. And until that notion changes, young girls like Filali may continue to opt for suicide over a lifetime of living with the men who violated them.
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And when you see so many western news where a rape victim ends up harassed if the rapists were popular football players it won't be surprised. Maybe you will be able to tell how it's not stigmatizing women for being raped and forcing them to shut their mouth. So many posts in this thread itself consider most cases to be fake even without any statistical proof. etc.
It's just one problem. It gets darker for many others. For some section they are already **** because of the rape thus now they should be available to any one( one reason some may choose to marry one rapist instead of getting targeted by even more people). ..and so on. The ones who end up dead or killed are in huge number too.
Denmark: I just found out that Denmark’s legislation “provides that if the perpetrator enters into or continues a marriage or registered partnership with the victim after the rape, it gives grounds for reducing or remitting the punishment.”What are you talking about? Rehabilitation requires serious effort from both parties, but there is a very low rate of rehabilitation in, for example, American facilities because they treat their inmates pretty badly there, especially in county jails.
And that depends very much on the country we're talking about, of course. The length of the sentence, the conditions of the jails, the help and opportunities afforded to the inmates, etc. These things all depend on what country we're talking about.
You talk like rapists serve no time at all. I don't know about India, but rape is not just 'frowned upon' here in Denmark, nor in the rest of the West generally, I would say.
The psychology? Are you going to just paint offenders with broad strokes? It seems ignorant to assume that these offenders, violent or sexual, have similar psyches.
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If you say something like that people will think it's some country in south Asia, Africa or middle east. [ In India it's not through legislation ( thank god) but the social notions are hard to fight and many may get pressurized in to a marriage to a rapist]
And I can link enough cases from Europe and america in recent years where rapist got as little as community service or walked out way too soon. But I suggest you be helpful and google it yourself.
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