South African Anti-Rape Condom Latches On To Attackers

Status
Not open for further replies.

Lethalfind

Well-Known Member
Joined
Aug 8, 2005
Location
Massachusetts
South African anti-rape condom latches on to attackers Mon Sep 12,10:36 AM ET



KLEINMOND, South Africa (AFP) - A female condom-like device that latches on to a rapist's penis with fish-tooth-like hooks is stirring controversy in South Africa, where the incidence of sexual assault is high.

ADVERTISEMENT

Called "Rapex", the latex device inserted in the vagina is the brainchild of South African Sonet Ehlers, who has been thinking about an anti-rape device since 1969, when she met a young rape victim.

"If you have seen a woman that has been raped, she is alive yet she is dead," Ehlers told AFP from her home in Kleinmond, a holiday town some 120 kilometers (75 miles) east of Cape Town.

"My biggest drive is to help the woman out," says Ehlers, 57, a mother of two daughters.

Rapex attaches itself to the shaft of the penis and can only be removed by a surgeon, forcing a rapist to go to a hospital, where the crime would presumably be uncovered.

"He has got to turn himself in at the nearest hospital and then the police will catch him," said Ehlers, who added that the device does not cause any permanent injury to the man's penis.

"This is not a tool to punish men, but a device to empower women," she said.

Ehlers hopes to put her device -- which can be kept inside the vagina for up to 24 hours -- on sale in South Africa next year at the cost of a rand (0.13 euros/0.16 US dollars).

But organisations such as Rape Crisis Cape Town say Rapex is not the solution to South Africa's sexual assault problem, with more than 52,000 rapes reported per year.

"We are going back to the fifteenth century. It's not empowering women, it increases their vulnerability to violence and murder," Rape Crisis director Chantel Cooper told AFP.

"It's not progressive at all, this is like a chastity belt. We need to understand that the safety of women is not an individual responsibility, but a societal issue," said Cooper.

About 40 percent of rape victims in South Africa are under the age of 18.

The National Institute for Crime Prevention and Rehabilitation estimates that only one in 20 rapes are reported to police.

Ehlers believes that women who travel long distances to get to their place of work, often in the early hours of the morning, would feel "safe" from rapists when wearing Rapex.

The device also protects women against sexually-transmitted disease including AIDS and unwanted pregnancy.

"Our women who catch taxis, buses, trains, walk to work, your middle class women, your poor women, it is well accepted among them," said Ehlers.
 
I guess no means no, huh?

If I ever go to prison I wonder if they have something like this for my tight little rectum? Prolly wouldn't make me the most popular guy to ass rape.
 
Status
Not open for further replies.
Back
Top