Saturday, December 23, 2023

Why sexual violence in war is so widespread — and under-covered

How to understand Hamas’s alleged sexual attacks on October 7.
VOX
Dec 23, 2023, 
A woman lights a candle placed atop a sign showing an Israeli flag with hand-written notes.
 Jack Guez/AFP via Getty Images


As Israeli officials piece together the attacks of October 7, evidence is mounting that Hamas committed crimes of sexual violence against the people it attacked in Israel — both women and men, both dead and alive.

UN testimony delivered earlier this month implicates Hamas and other militants in potential sexual crimes during the rampage in Israel, including shooting at the genitals of the victims, inserting foreign objects into sexual organs, as well as, potentially, rape and other forms of sexual violence. But as the testimonies shared before the UN indicate, investigations into what happened on that day are ongoing and will be complicated by the fact that many of the victims and witnesses are dead.

Sexual violence is horrific in any context, and is always connected to power and domination. But it takes on a different dimension when it is utilized as a tool of war — as it has been for centuries. And even though it is an unfortunately common feature of broader conflict, it’s often misunderstood and is difficult to prosecute — as all war crimes are — making justice for victims a complicated prospect at best.

In the case of the October 7 attacks, high-profile figures, like Sheryl Sandberg and Hillary Clinton, who has also firmly backed Israel’s war in Gaza, have called for more attention to be drawn to the allegations. There has been a fraught discourse over claims the allegations were insufficiently covered and ignored by the United Nations, followed by scrutiny of the motivations of those who are highlighting it and how this all plays into the world’s understanding of October 7 and Israel’s ensuing war in Gaza. It’s worth pointing out: Sexual violence in conflict is often under-covered relative to the gravity of the harms inflicted.

The United Nations and Israel are now seriously pursuing these allegations. The UN secretary-general on conflict-related sexual violence has requested access to information to investigate the assaults, and a UN Commission of Inquiry collecting evidence of war crimes — including sexual violence — committed by all sides in Israel and the occupied Palestinian territories since October 7 was established in the days following the attacks.

Testimony and evidence available so far indicates that some horrific forms of sexual violence did occur on October 7. (Hamas, for its part, has denied that its fighters would engage in that specific kind of brutality.) But it’s not yet clear how widespread that sexual violence was, and it may be unclear for many months to come, in part because Israel has been somewhat circumspect in releasing information, given the sensitive nature of the alleged crimes.

What is known is that violent conflict almost always includes sexual violence — in fact, as one expert Vox spoke to said, it is actually an inherent, if under-examined, aspect of conflict.
What we know about sexual violence on October 7

Israeli authorities have collected testimony from witnesses and first responders, as well as footage gathered from militants as they attacked towns and villages, as part of the Israeli government’s investigation into the sexual crimes that Hamas and other militants allegedly perpetrated. Evidence is still emerging and may be difficult to ascertain in full — gathering that evidence becomes forensically challenging as dead bodies decompose. And it may take time for survivors — including, potentially, hostages — to be able to recount their experiences and share them with the authorities, since sexual trauma often carries with it shame, doubt, and confusion.

Conflict-related sexual violence encompasses a broad and evolving set of crimes that don’t necessarily involve rape; sexually invasive searches, groping, stripping and public shaming, and damaging or maiming sexual organs are all forms of sexual violence, as is coercion into sexual acts to secure favorable treatment, shelter, food, or security in conflict or in captivity.

Following the October 7 attack in Israel, witnesses have presented testimony about nails and other objects being placed in the sexual organs of at least one victim, as well as evidence that militants shot at the sexual organs of victims. Israeli police have also collected witness testimony that indicates militants violently raped some of the victims, CNN reported earlier this month. However, the police do not have first-hand testimony from survivors, because it’s not clear there are any left. (Israel’s Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu, after meeting with released hostages, has said that Hamas and militants in Gaza are sexually assaulting female hostages.)

The investigation thus far has released limited information, with authorities navigating the tension between respecting the privacy of victims and ensuring the world knows about the violence.

“There’s an effort by the [Israeli] government … to not really reveal yet a lot of what happened for various reasons, both to protect the people who were released, and the people who are still captive, and maybe other reasons that we’re not aware,” Mairav Zonszein, senior Israel analyst with the International Crisis Group, told Vox. “So there’s a lot of fog around all of it.”
Putting the sexual violence of October 7 in context

Though sexual violence in conflict is not new, sexual violence at this scale in this particular conflict, at least by Palestinian actors, is, Zonszein said. (There is documented evidence of rape and sexual assault by Israeli troops against Palestinians during the Nakba, though since then, many scholars argue that sexual violence by Israel Defense Forces against Palestinians is rare during conflict. However, state-sponsored sexual violence against Palestinians does occur in other contexts, like in Israeli prisons and by Israeli settlers in the territories. As with all sexual violence, it’s difficult to evaluate how widespread these phenomena are due to limits in self-reporting.)

There could be many reasons for this; one is simply the unprecedented scale of Hamas’s attack, as well as the nature of it. Rather than the suicide bombings or rocket attacks Hamas has intermittently used against Israel over the last decade, Hamas and the Palestinian Islamic Jihad fighters who breached the Gaza border fence to attack Israeli towns and villages were face-to-face with their victims in ways Palestinian militants hadn’t been in previous conflicts — creating the opportunity to commit sexual violence.

Another possibility, if indeed the attacks were premeditated as Israeli officials have insisted, is that Hamas may have intentionally used the tactic as part of the group’s broader plan to provoke a massive reaction from Israel. If so, Jennie Burnet, director of the Institute for Women’s, Gender and Sexuality Studies at Georgia Southern University, said it’s worth asking if they picked up the tactic of using sexual violence from other extremist groups they are in contact with, such as the Islamic Revolutionary Guard Corps, which routinely uses sexual violence as a terror tactic against Iranians.

“It’s really important that it be investigated what precisely happened,” Burnet said. “Whether it was Hamas soldiers or militants taking their own initiatives, or whether it was planned and systematic, I think that is an important thing to uncover.”
Sexual violence is intrinsic to war throughout history

Sexual violence is extremely common throughout the history of conflict and conquest, though our understanding of what constitutes sexual violence within conflict is evolving. For example, the idea of enslaved people or concubines who were always at a ruler’s disposal for sex would have been thought of as slavery or membership in a royal court rather than as conflict-related sexual violence centuries ago. The taking of “brides” or sex slaves, as ISIS did to Yazidi women in Iraq as it captured land to build its caliphate, is now considered a clear-cut case of sexual violence.

UN peacekeepers in Haiti, insurgent groups like the Rapid Support Forces in Sudan, state actors like Japan’s use of Korean “comfort women,” and Russian forces raping Ukrainians are among the wide variety of perpetrators. Academic literature, especially that which centers on avenues for justice, often focuses on cases of systemic sexual violence — most often in the Rwandan genocide and in the Bosnian war, as the violence was so widespread, systemic, and ethnically motivated. These conflicts also led to the first international tribunals to include prosecutions for conflict-related sexual violence, and the documentation, study, and prosecution of these cases greatly advanced the study of conflict-related sexual violence.

“The prosecution of sexual violence by the [International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda and the International Criminal Tribunal for the Former Yugoslavia] transformed scholarly studies of gender and war, as well as international human rights law,” Burnet said. Other instances, like the abuse of Korean women by Japanese soldiers and longstanding patterns of sexual violence by armed groups in the Democratic Republic of the Congo, remain under-studied.

But no matter who is perpetrating this violence or where it’s happening, it’s part of conflict because it serves a purpose — really, three purposes. First, experts say, it telegraphs to a community under siege that nowhere and no one is safe; second, it destabilizes the targeted society by fraying community and familial bonds, often by targeting women who often maintain those bonds; and third, it breaks the “gender contract” of a society, shattering the illusion that a society’s men can “protect” its women from violence.

“Sexual violence is very, very effective in destroying the women and girls of a particular community, but also the repercussions are massive, in terms of [disrupting] entire communities, entire families, entire communities, and entire nations,” said Joanna Bourke, a historian who has written extensively about sexual violence, war, and conflict.

This violence has devastating repercussions for women in terms of unintended pregnancies, disease, and injury to their sexual organs, Bourke said, but it also can create a cycle of harm, particularly for any children born from the sexual violence of the invading or adversarial forces. Significant evidence “shows that these children are highly abused, they have a real marginal existence within their communities, and have a disruptive presence within their communities, because they are constant reminders of the war, and what went wrong,” she told Vox.

This is not to say that men are never the victims of conflict-related sexual violence; they are, and likely far more often than is reported. There are more extreme examples, but one of the most jarring was the series of photos of detained Iraqi men coming from Abu Ghraib prison in 2004. American soldiers participated in and took photos of the men naked and piled on top of each other, and forced them to perform sexual acts, in a horrific pattern of sexual humiliation and abuse.

“Sexual violence [against] men in military conflicts has been kind of ignored, mainly because it doesn’t or doesn’t always … involve rape,” Bourke said. “But it does involve sexual humiliation, it does involve the crushing of testicles, it does involve all those sorts of things,” which researchers had previously classified as torture. “It turns out to be extremely high levels of sexual abuse against men in modern conflicts, but it simply was being categorized differently, because they were men and not women.”
Can victims of sexual violence in war find justice?

The Geneva Conventions, the post-World War II international agreements that form the basis for international humanitarian law (IHL), “require the parties to an armed conflict to protect women against rape, and to protect women and children from indecent assault,” Adil Haque, a professor at Rutgers Law School who specializes in the law of armed conflict, told Vox.

Though it is unlawful under the Geneva Conventions, sexual violence in conflict is difficult to prosecute in ordinary civilian courts, especially in places where gender inequality is pronounced and societal understanding of sex crimes is limited, as it was in Rwanda following the genocide of the Tutsi people by the Hutu militias. “In Rwanda before the genocide, there [was no] precise word for rape or sexual violence in the local language, Kinyarwanda, and most Rwandan traditions are around dealing with sexual impropriety,” Burnet said. “They didn’t address rape, they addressed inappropriate sexual relationships between men and women.” And although rape was against the law at the time of the genocide, “at the time rape was not clearly defined.”

However, in both Rwanda and Bosnia, “women survivors of sexual violence in the conflict ... wanted legal recourse, and they wanted their perpetrators held to account before courts whenever possible,” Burnet told Vox. “And there’s documented cases in both countries of women going to great lengths and breaking lots of social taboos by giving testimony before courts about how they were violated, as part of that effort,” as well as, in Rwanda, demanding that the post-conflict national law categorize sexual violence among the most severe crimes of genocide.

Both Rwanda and Bosnia used their national courts to try (largely lower-level) perpetrators of conflict-related sexual violence. Under IHL, national courts are the right venue to try war crimes committed by regular troops, as long as they have the appropriate laws to prosecute conflict-related sexual violence. However, even with the right laws on the books, that doesn’t mean survivors get the justice they deserve; as of 2017, less than 1 percent of the estimated 20,000 Bosnians who suffered conflict-related sexual violence had their cases tried, according to Amnesty International.

Bosnia and Rwanda also set up special tribunals in cooperation with the United Nations, which were intended to go after those in power who directed or facilitated sexual violence in those conflicts, as well as other war crimes and crimes against humanity. Though the international tribunal courts arguably did not go far enough in providing reparations and support for victims of sexual violence, they were the first international criminal tribunals to bring charges pertaining to conflict-related sexual violence.

But many people who have suffered the life-long consequences of conflict-related sexual violence never find a measure of justice, whether that’s in court or a formal apology. Over the decades, disagreements over how to recognize, characterize, and provide reparations for “comfort women,” the Korean women and children who were used as sex slaves for Japanese soldiers during that country’s occupation of the Korean Peninsula, have greatly contributed to the strained relations between the two countries. Despite a 2015 agreement and apology from Japan, it remains contentious; over the past decade, the issue has been litigated in South Korean courts, with Japan denying that the victims were forcibly taken from their homes and objecting to the use of “sexual slavery” to describe the events.

In the context of October 7, Israel has already indicated that it is taking claims of sexual violence seriously, as has the International Criminal Court (ICC).

“Importantly, rape is a war crime under the ICC Statute ... as well as a crime against humanity if committed as part of a widespread or systematic attack on a civilian population,” Haque said. “The ICC prosecutor, from his very first public statements about the conflict, alluded to clear evidence of sexual violence, and has repeatedly identified rape as one of the war crimes that his office is investigating.”

Though the ICC and Israeli police are investigating the reports of sexual violence during Hamas’s attack, Israel is not cooperating with the UN Commission of Inquiry due to perceived anti-Israel bias, which could greatly impede the investigation into war crimes that the commission is mandated to perform. Israel has invited the special representative of the secretary-general on sexual violence in conflict, Pramila Patten, on an official visit to the country, but Israel hasn’t invited the UN agencies with a mandate to investigate the allegations to do so yet. Israel’s investigation into the reports of sexual violence indicates a willingness to try the perpetrators in court, and the ICC could potentially have jurisdiction over some crimes that occurred on October 7, even though Israel is not party to the ICC.

Regardless of how these investigations play out, justice for victims of conflict-related sexual violence is not guaranteed, despite forward steps in its study, understanding, and prosecution.

Ellen Ioanes covers breaking and general assignment news as the weekend reporter at Vox. She previously worked at Business Insider covering the military and global conflicts.

 

A world in which women move freely without fear of men: An anthropological perspective on rape


Abstract

In western scholarly debate, there is nearly universal acceptance of rape as a male trait typical of all time periods and cultures. However, cross-cultural data provide insight into societies where rape is rare or unknown and can therefore be helpful to develop strategies for prevention. The paper focuses on the question why men do not rape in these societies with rape being understood as a crime that reflects male dominance and entitlement.

An earlier finding by Sanday [J. Soc. Issues 37 (1981) 5] that such “rape-free” societies attach importance to the “contributions women make to social continuity” is further analyzed by taking an in-depth look at matrilineal societies. The category “matrilineal” is chosen because these cultures recognize women's contributions to social continuity, and absence or rareness of rape has been repeatedly reported. Data from matrilineal cultures from the relevant literature including my own work in South America are compared with a select body of data discussing western rapists. As the discussion demonstrates, the specific gender dynamics in matrilineal cultures reduce the significance of man's sexual persona and thus male heterosexual authority which mitigates the potential of male dominance and rape.

Introduction

In western scholarly debate, there is nearly universal acceptance of rape as a male trait typical of all time periods and cultures. This view is essentially anchored in assumptions that male dominance is universal. Thornhill and Palmer (2000, p. 83) go so far to attribute a positive evolutionary value to male dominance and violence as factors that contribute to reproductive success: “If females' resistance results in their mating with males adept at overcoming it, the sons of rapists will be similarly adept, having inherited the genes of their fathers.” Therefore, the authors argue, “It is conceivable that in the past women who filtered potential rapists by resisting them bore sons who turned out to be adept at raping and thus may have had more grandchildren than passive females.”

Feminist scholarship has challenged the idea of rape as a natural given. Susan Brownmiller opened the door with her groundbreaking work Against Our Will (1975). Unlike Thornhill and Palmer, Brownmiller does not see rape as an act of nature and an evolutionary triumph but as an act of power and domination, a concept that has been further developed in later feminist debates. MacKinnon (1987, p. 87), for example, focuses on rape as a construct defined by men and the consequences this has for dealing with rape: “The rape law,” Mackinnon (1989, p. 182) argues from a legal perspective, “affirmatively rewards men with acquittals for not comprehending women's point of view on sexual encounters”. Scully's (1990) study of sexual violence views rape as learned behavior within a patriarchal culture. According to her findings rapists as compared to other felons are more likely to believe in a double standard regarding gender roles and they identify more strongly with the traditional male role. In her study of the anti-rape movement, Bevacqua (2000) addresses one of the cornerstones of feminist research, the connection between theory and practice. “For three decades,” Bevacqua (2000, p. 199) observes, “the movement has been calling into question the sexual entitlement of American men.” She believes that advances have been made when she concludes, “At its core, the anti-rape movement is a threat to the male right of sexual dominance.”

As the record indicates, both feminist and misogynist scholars talk about what will be referred to here as “rape culture” though they clearly understand its causes and impact very differently. As used in the following discussion, “rape culture”, a term coined by Hall and Flannery (1984, p. 404), refers to a system that produces assailants who “may believe that normal sexual relationships involve male dominance and female resistance. Rape may be a way of proving one's manhood, an important concern for adolescent males.” In rape cultures, dominance and control over women become aspects of achieving and experiencing masculinity, and rape, while not condoned, becomes part of the culture at large. But while the concept of rape culture postulates that rape is the result of social forces it does not clarify if these forces operate universally. This is a point where feminist debate needs to go further and employ a cross-cultural approach.

Helliwell (2000, p. 797), an anthropologist from Australia, who says she admits having shared the view of rape as a universal began to question this hypothesis when she became confronted with the issue in a community in Borneo “in which rape does not occur.” Her observation, however, is not an isolated incident. The hypothesis of rape as an inevitable factor in human culture, indeed, vanishes in the view of cross-cultural evidence, which shows that there are cultures in which rape is unknown or occurs so rarely that a different gender profile emerges as compared to our own. This means that we have to ask new questions. Thus, rather than, as Palmer (1989, p. 12) suggests, to place “emphasis on identifying the ways in which certain cultures are inefficient in discouraging males from raping,” we need to ask, “Why do men not rape?” The question is not directed at the individual level but at cultures in general, that is, how do “rape cultures” differ from non- (or low-) rape cultures?

Sanday began this discussion in 1981. Using the Human Relations Area Files as her database, she concluded that “rape-free” societies do exist. In this category, she included cultures with extremely low incidents of rape. According to Sanday (1981, p. 18), two major factors are responsible for the absence or low incident of rape: First, “rape-free” societies are characterized by sexual equality and the notion that the sexes are complementary.” Second, “the key to understanding the relative absence of rape…is the importance… attached to the contribution women make to social continuity.”

Sanday has been criticized for her interpretation of some of the data (see esp. Palmer, 1989). Indeed, the issue of data interpretation is riddled with many difficulties especially in this area of research. Above all, we face the problem of definition and the availability of statistical evidence. However, these peculiarities of the data situation affect all scholars dealing with rape.

In this paper, I will approach the issue of rape by focusing on matrilineal societies.1

I choose matriliny as a category for three reasons. First, we have evidence from many such cultures that allow us to define them as “rape-free” following Sanday's definition.2

Secondly, they prominently acknowledge women's contributions to social continuity and thus reflect Sanday's second category. And, thirdly, they fit Sanday's first category of sexual complementarity. The database is constituted from matrilineal societies for which information on rape is available and includes North and South America, Oceania, Asia, and Africa. This paper addresses only rape of women by men and defines rape as an act reflecting male dominance and entitlement associated with sexual violence against women. Rape becomes a specific expression of gender dynamics in a given society. Since different cultures create different gender dynamics we can expect to find wide variation with regard to definition and perception of rape and different approaches dealing with it. A discussion of these issues must, however, also include the possibility of rape not existing at all.

In the following, I list evidence from rape-free or low-rape cultures for which further extensive ethnographic data exist which allow us to situate this information in a wider context.

For the Iroquois, several sources make the claim that rape is unknown Canfield, 1902, Seaver, 1932, Stone, 1838. Especially telling is a letter from 1779 written by General Clinton to his lieutenant in which he holds up the Iroquois warrior as a role model: “Bad as the savages are, they never violate the chastity of women, their prisoners. Although I have very little apprehension that any of the soldiers will so far forget their character as to attempt such a crime on the Indian women who may fall into their hands, yet it will be well to take measures to prevent such a stain upon our army ” (Stone, 1838, I, p. 404; see also Hewitt, 1932, p. 483). That general Clinton had, indeed, reason to be worried is apparent from the following remark by General Patton almost 200 years later (Patton, 1947, p. 23) with regard to western soldiers during the Second World War WW II: “I then told him that, in spite of my most diligent efforts, there would unquestioningly be some raping, and that I should like to have the details as early as possible so that the offenders could be properly hanged.” The general obviously does not condone rape and promises “proper” punishment. But it gives the reader of Patton's autobiography pause that a man as powerful as he cannot—“in spite of his most diligent efforts”—prevent rape. Both, generals Clinton and Patton see western men, at least during war times as potential rapists.

Iroquois and Western cultures, obviously, hold different views of masculinity as is evident from various statements doubting Iroquois men's masculinity and heroism in battle (cf. Randle, 1950, Stone, 1841), a view that also surfaces in remarks about rape as in the following which suggests the absence of rape due to a low sex drive:

I may here observe, that I don't remember to have heard an instance of these savages offering to violate the chastity of any of the fair sex who have fallen into their hands; this is principally owing to a natural inappetancy in their constitution (Anonymous, 1977 [1780], p. 5).

All of these observations and comments do not explain the rape-free character of Iroquois society but reflect the acceptance of rape as a given in the West.

Among the Ashanti in West Africa rape is seen as incongruous. Rattray (1927, p. 211) mentions only one case. The perpetrator was condemned to death.

For Oceania, various rape-free societies are reported. Nash, for example, working on Bougainville, found that her informants had problems even understanding the concept of rape: “Rape is practically non-existent,” writes Nash (1987, p. 164), the people “could not quite imagine how it would work (the woman would cry out [and people would help her]).” Lepowsky (1993, p. 292) documented the same for Vanatinai. She emphasizes the complementary roles of the sexes rather than the matrilineal structure: “Both women and men are brought up to have assertive personalities. But physical violence against women—and men—is abhorred and occurs only rarely. I have never heard of a case of rape. One of the last battles on the island took place as retaliation for a man's attack on his wife.”

Among the Mosuo of Southwest China rape is completely unknown (Knoedel, 1997, p. 344). Crime and murder are extremely rare. Furthermore, the Mosuo have astonished the West as well as their Chinese Han neighbors by rejecting marriage. While these data only state the absence of rape without giving an explanation, the next examples discuss motives for rejecting rape as unacceptable behavior.

For several societies, it is reported that rape is not only rare but also seen as a shameful act which puts a man's virility and his very humanity in question.

Among the Apache (Farrer, 1999), “Until very recent times, no proper male person would rape a female person (local or enemy), because the rapist lost face not being ‘man enough’ to get a woman on his own.” “An Apache man suffers enormous status loss by forcing himself sexually on anyone: ‘He does not even deserve to be called a man, a human being’” (Farrer, 1997, p. 242).

Sanday (1986, p. 84) reports for the Minangkabau that a rapist's “masculinity is ridiculed and he faces assault, perhaps death, or he might be driven from his village never to return.”

The Trobrianders present still another example that a man using force will face ridicule and shame. While Sanday lists the Trobrianders under her “rape-free” category, Palmer (1989, p. 10), quoting Malinowski (1929, p. 489f), states that rape exists and reports that the Trobrianders have a special word for rapist “tokolos” [sic]. But Palmer does not read Malinowski very carefully nor does he cite him correctly. Reading Malinowski's original text suggests a different picture: Explaining that the Trobrianders “attach shame to erotic unsuccess”, Malinowski (1929, p. 489f) writes that “Censure of lechery in a man has the same foundation. Tokokolosi (sic) is the word used to denote a man who pursues women and inflicts his attentions on them.” The example following (pp. 490–491) raises questions if this is, indeed, a rape situation. In a general comment on Trobriand sexual attitudes Malinowski (1929, p. 491) (emphasis added) makes it even clearer that to the Trobriands rape represents conduct not compatible with successful masculinity: “The whole attitude of the Trobrianders towards sexual excess displays an appreciation of restraint and dignity, and an admiration for success; not only for what it gives to a man, but because it means that he is above any need for active aggression. The moral command not to violate, solicit, or touch is founded on a strong conviction that it is shameful; and shameful because real worth lies in being coveted, in conquering by charm, by beauty and by magic.”

Among the Guajiro of South America, rape is considered a heinous crime. It took years before some of my informants admitted to me that rape occurred. Discussion about violence against and abuse of women indicated that our definitions—theirs and mine—differed. One woman told me that she had been raped during her puberty ritual while being inside the seclusion hut. It is, however, unthinkable by Guajiro standards that a rape could occur under such circumstances. As I kept asking her to explain this to me the woman described how a young man had been looking at her through the walls of her hut. Clearly, this was a grave breach of privacy. But it would not be called rape in many places. In another case, a young woman received the visit of a man who hoped to marry her. The mother, who was interested in this match, had left the daughter at home with a younger child of the family knowing full well (according to the daughter) that the suitor would visit her. He tried to talk her into having sex with him, but she refused. He did not rape her and he left the rancho late at night. The woman, telling me this many years later, blamed her mother for having left her alone that night and thus facilitating the encounter (Watson-Franke, 1983). But, she also blamed the nuns in the mission school she had attended for not having prepared her properly for adult life. She claimed that women who do not engage in sex had no business educating young females. Guajiros in general, though women more strongly, will always insist that sex has to be dealt with in a responsible manner and that women must be treated with utmost respect. Therefore, if the unspeakable occurs, the victim must undergo a ritual so she can reenter community and life as it was before the crime (Watson-Franke, 1982).

Guajiro women of the desert, however, do not live under the cloud of rape, they are not afraid. A personal experience will illustrate that. I remember walking with my guide in the desert late in the evening. It was already after 11:00 PM and we still had some way to go. I felt uncomfortable but said nothing not to upset her. The next day, however, I brought up the issue to avoid such nightly walks in the future. She replied, yes, she had been scared, too. This, of course, confirmed my conviction that the desert was as unsafe for a woman traveling at night as the big cities. When I then mentioned that a man in Europe had attacked me, she looked surprised and replied: “You were afraid of people? Oh no, there is no reason for that. I was thinking of the snakes.” How different our fears had been.

I will now turn to one of the factors identified as eliminating or reducing rape and rape-proneness, that is women's contributions to social continuity.

Section snippets

Women's conributions to social continuity

At the core of this issue lies the maternal role of women.3 Traditional western scholarship frequently reduced matrilineal motherhood to 

Men's contributions to social continuity

Since women situate the next generation socially, historically, economically, and politically, matriliny greatly diminishes the need for the certainty and authority of paternity. This position is contrary to the western view that social continuity and thus stability are to be anchored in a strong male authoritarian sex-based presence. Matrilineal and western cultures clearly hold different views of the impact and meaning of fatherhood. Rattray, for example, noting an absence of patria potestas

The importance of male heterosexual authority in western cultures

Male heterosexual authority is a patriarchal phenomenon. Therefore, and, for comparative reasons, we will briefly consider some aspects of rape and rape-proneness in western patriarchal cultures where the presence of a strong controlling paternal authority is seen as the basis for the development of mature masculinity. Paternal absence, on the other hand, is believed to produce rape-proneness. As Thornhill and Palmer (2000, p. 77), for example, have stated: “It appears that cues during boys

Concluding remarks

Matrilineal systems display features that much of western discourse has traditionally associated with rape and rape-proneness. But this whole scenario, as we have seen from some research, is not all that clear cut. The paper addresses two of these features: First, fathers in matrilineal systems are marginal in the family structure and do not represent male authority. This allegedly leads to rape-proneness. Second, men acknowledge the autonomy and authority of women and do not and should not

2002



Cologne bows to Turkish racists, removes Armenian Genocide monument

The Armenian Genocide monument in Cologne was removed under pressure from racist organisations affiliated with the Turkish state.


ANF
COLOGNE
Thursday, 21 Dec 2023, 18:23

Having been the target of constant attacks for years, the Armenian Genocide monument in Cologne, Germany, was finally removed. While a small number of Armenians live in Cologne, the city has turned into the headquarters of the National Vision organisation affiliated to the Turkish state.

French journalist Guillaume Perrier wrote on his X account: "The city of Cologne is finally dismantling a monument commemorating the Armenian genocide. Cologne has a small Armenian community, but above all a large Turkish community".

Journalist Perrier added: "This is above all the result of pressure from the Turkish government and concessions from the German right (the CDU used, encouraged and supported the Grey Wolves and Milli Görüs against the influence of the left on Turkish immigrants)."

French senator Valerie Boyer wrote on her X account that "Cologne has bowed to the Turkish National Visionists who impose the denial of the 1915 Armenian genocide". Boyer said, "This is a direct consequence of Turkish immigration to Germany... It is a harbinger of bitter days in Europe".

The monument in Cologne symbolising the Armenian genocide, which Turkey does not recognise, has been erected and dismantled several times over the years following protests by Turkish nationalists.

The city had the statue removed, sometimes on the grounds of the construction of a cycle path and sometimes out of fear of "social unrest".

After a march in late October by Turkish nationalists, including supporters of the racist, far-right “Ãœlkü Ocakları” and DITIB associations, the city's final decision was "the monument must be removed".

12 Turkish soldiers have been killed over 2 days in clashes with Kurdish militants, authorities say


Updated December 23, 2023

ISTANBUL, Turkey (AP) — Six Turkish soldiers were killed Saturday in clashes with Kurdish militants in northern Iraq, a day after another six were also killed.

The six soldiers slain on Saturday died in a firefight when militants attempted to infiltrate a Turkish base, according to a statement by the Turkish Defense Ministry. The statement said 13 militants had been “neutralized.”

In addition to the six Turkish soldiers killed on Friday, four militants were slain, authorities said.

Turkey conducts operations and airstrikes against targets in Syria and Iraq that it believes to be affiliated with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party, or PKK, a banned Kurdish separatist group that has waged an insurgency against Turkey since the 1980s.

Ankara maintains that PKK has sanctuaries in northern Iraq, where its leadership is also purportedly based. The PKK is considered a terror organization by the United States and the European Union. Tens of thousands of people have died since the start of the conflict in 1984.

Footage of guerrilla action in which three Turkish soldiers were killed

Images from guerrilla areas prove the serious losses suffered by Turkish forces in the guerrilla areas in the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, which are denied or concealed by the Turkish state.

ANF
BEHDINAN
Thursday, 21 Dec 2023, 12:52

Gerîla TV published footage of an action carried out by guerrillas against Turkish troops in the region of Xakurkê in the guerrilla-held Medya Defense Zones in southern Kurdistan (northern Iraq).

According to the Press Centre of the People’s Defense Forces (HPG), the action at 10:45 on 27 November was directed against the Turkish forces in the Girê Åžehîd Heqî area of Xakurkê. Strikes by heavy weapons left a position of the Turkish troops destroyed and three soldiers in it dead




Political prisoners in Buca jail call on people outside to increase actions for Öcalan

Political prisoners in Buca Kırıklar Prison said: "We see all kinds of actions and activities as legitimate until Abdullah Öcalan is liberated."


ANF
NEWS DESK
Friday, 22 Dec 2023, 12:01

The alternating hunger strike action started by political prisoners on 27 November to demand the physical freedom of Kurdish People's Leader Abdullah Öcalan continues. Political prisoners in Buca Kırıklar Closed Prison No. 2 sent a message through their lawyers.

Call to enlarge actions

The prisoners' message is as follows: "First of all, we, the free prisoners, salute all patriots, peace seekers, democrats and human rights defenders with our free hearts. As 32 political prisoners in Buca Kırıklar Prison No. 2, we join the 'Freedom for Mr. Öcalan, solution to the Kurdish question' campaign with great enthusiasm and morale. We continue our hunger strike with great determination. Friends and enemies know that Mr. Öcalan is above everything for us. The guarantee of peace, freedom and democracy in Turkey and the Middle East is Mr. Öcalan. Everyone knows very well that Mr. Öcalan is the interlocutor in the solution of the Kurdish question.

We are ready to take any action for Mr. Öcalan's freedom. As of now, two of our friends are continuing their hunger strike actions alternately a week. We say to the state authorities and our partners around the world that we see all kinds of actions and activities as legitimate until Mr. Öcalan is liberated. And we are ready to make any sacrifice. We know that the hearts of our families and people are with us and they wholeheartedly support our action. Still, we call out to our people once again: increase your support for us and bring Mr. Öcalan and the freedom of Kurdistan closer with actions and events."





No sheep’s clothing needed: Colorado reintroduces five gray wolves

Wolves are the first part of a plan to reintroduce the endangered species into the state after it was eradicated in the region

In an effort to restore an endangered species, Colorado just released five gray wolves in the western part of the state.

On Monday, Colorado parks and wildlife released two female and three male wolves on to remote public land. The predators were captured and brought over from Oregon, after Wyoming, Idaho and Montana refused to share their wolves citing interstate migration and financial concerns.

In a 2020 ballot measure, Colorado residents voted to reintroduce the species after it was eradicated due to government-funded killing programs.

“For the first time since the 1940s, the howl of wolves will officially return to western Colorado,” Governor Jared Polis said in a statement.

The plan to restore the endangered population was met with support from conservationists but opposition from ranchers and rural communities, who see wolves as a threat to livestock and hunting.

“Most ranchers won’t experience direct conflict with wolves, but some will,” said Kevin Crooks, director of the Center for Human-Carnivore Coexistence at Colorado State University, in a statement to the Guardian. “For those individual ranchers, when wolves kill, chase, or stress their livestock, the economic and emotional impacts can be considerable, affecting their livelihood and well-being. It is important to work with residents in the state to help them prepare for living with wolves.”

The state will compensate ranchers with up to $15,000 for every domesticated animal lost to wolves. Gray wolves are federally protected under the Endangered Species Act in Colorado, but only as an “experimental population”. This allows wildlife officials to kill wolves that threaten livestock.

“We’ll continue releasing animals based on our plan to have wolves not just survive but thrive in Colorado as they did a century ago,” said Jeff Davis, director of Colorado parks and wildlife in a statement.

Five more wolves are set to be released in the same area of Colorado’s western slope in the coming months. The repopulation plan calls for 30 to 50 wolves to be reintroduced in the next five years.

“This event is historic not just because of its ecological and conservation significance, but also because it marks the first time voters decided to reintroduce a native species,” said Becky Niemiec, director of the Animal-Human Policy Center at Colorado State University, in a statement to the Guardian. “Wolf reintroduction in Colorado is happening because many Colorado voters want wolves on the landscape – they want wolves as part of the ecosystem and have strong emotional and cultural connections to this species.”

Last week, two ranching groups filed lawsuits in an attempt to halt the release of gray wolves. On Friday, a federal judge voted to go forward with the reintroduction plan.

Efforts to restore the gray wolf population come amid the accelerating extinction crisis and wildlife loss. This October, the US Fish and Wildlife Service removed 21 species from the endangered list due to extinction. Most of the lost species are Hawaiian birds that couldn’t withstand diseases carried by invasive mosquitoes.


Colorado releases first 5 wolves in reintroduction plan approved by voters to chagrin of ranchers

Wildlife officials released five gray wolves into a remote forest in Colorado’s Rocky Mountains on Monday to kick off a voter-approved reintroduction program that was embraced in the state’s mostly Democratic urban corridor but staunchly opposed in conservative rural areas where ranchers worry about attacks on livestock. 



BY JESSE BEDAYN
 December 18, 2023

GRAND COUNTY, Colorado (AP) — Somewhere on a remote mountainside in Colorado’s Rockies, a latch flipped on a crate and a wolf bounded out, heading toward the tree line. Then it stopped short.

For a moment, the young female looked back at it’s audience of roughly 45 people who stared on in reverential silence. Then she disappeared into the forest.

She was one of five gray wolves Wildlife officials released in a remote part of Colorado’s Rocky Mountains on Monday to kick off a voter-approved reintroduction program that was embraced in the state’s mostly Democratic urban corridor but staunchly opposed in conservative rural areas where ranchers worry about attacks on livestock.

The wolves were set free from crates in a Grand County location that state officials kept undisclosed to protect the predators.


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It marked the start of the most ambitious wolf reintroduction effort in the U.S. in almost three decades and a sharp departure from aggressive efforts by Republican-led states to cull wolf packs. A judge on Friday night had denied a request from the state’s cattle industry for a temporary delay to the release.

The group watched as the first two wolves — 1-year-old male and female siblings with gray fur — were set free. The male bolted up the golden grass, running partially sideways to keep an eye on everyone behind, then turning left into the trees.

The crowd watched in silence, then some hugged each other and low murmurs started up

When the latch on the second crate flipped, the wolf didn’t budge. Everyone waited as Colorado Gov. Jared Polis peeked into the cage.

After roughly 30 seconds, those around the crates stepped back, giving the wolf space. The female slowly rose then bounded up a snowy divot in the dirt road, looking back before disappearing into an aspen grove.

Wolves “have larger-than-life places in human imagination, in the stories we all grew up with and tell each other,” said Polis. “To see them in their natural habitat, and turn around look curiously at us ... is really, really a special moment that I will treasure for my entire life.”

The other three wolves released were another pair of 1-year-old male and female siblings, as well a 2-year-old male. The wolves were all caught in Oregon on Sunday.

When the final crate opened, the 2-year-old male with a black coat immediately darted out, making a sharp right past onlookers and dashing into the trees. He didn’t look back once.

When it all ended, a small round of applause broke out.

Colorado officials anticipate releasing 30 to 50 wolves within the next five years in hopes the program starts to fill in one of the last remaining major gaps in the western U.S. for the species. Gray wolves historically ranged from northern Canada to the desert southwest.

The carnivores’ planned release in Colorado, voted for in a 2020 ballot measure, has sharpened divides between rural and urban residents. City and suburb dwellers largely voted to reintroduce the apex predators into the rural areas where prey can include livestock that help drive local economies and big game such as elk that are prized by hunters.

The reintroduction, starting with the release of up to 10 wolves in coming months, emerged as a political wedge issue when GOP-dominated Wyoming, Idaho and Montana refused to share their wolves for the effort. Colorado officials ultimately turned to another Democratic state — Oregon — to secure wolves.

Excited wildlife advocates have started a wolf-naming contest, but ranchers in the Rocky Mountains where the releases will occur are anxious. They’ve seen glimpses of what the future could hold as a handful of wolves that wandered down from Wyoming over the past two years killed livestock.

The fear is such attacks will worsen, adding to a spate of perceived assaults on western Colorado’s rural communities as the state’s liberal leaders embrace clean energy and tourism, eclipsing economic mainstays such as fossil fuel extraction and agriculture.

To allay livestock industry fears, ranchers who lose livestock or herding and guard animals to wolf attacks will be paid fair market value, up to $15,000 per animal.

Hunting groups also have raised concerns that wolves will reduce the size of elk herds and other big game animals that the predators eat.

Meanwhile, Colorado residents who backed the reintroduction are going to have to get used to wildlife agents killing wolves that prey on livestock.

Some wolves were already killed when they crossed from Colorado into Wyoming, which has a “predatory” zone for wolves covering most of the state in which they can be shot on sight.

Joanna Lambert, professor of wildlife ecology and conservation biology at the University of Colorado at Boulder, said she lost her breath when she saw the wolves gallop into the woods on Monday.

For years, Lambert and wolf advocates have been working to get wolf “paws on the ground” and “all the sudden, it happened.”

“This is a moment of rewilding,” Lambert said, “of doing something to stave off the biodiversity extinction crisis we are living in.”