Lesbians living in South Africa are being subjected to corrective rape and severe violence by men trying to cure them of their sexual orientation, human rights groups have said.
Lesbians living in South Africa are being subjected to "corrective rape" and severe violence by men trying to "cure" them of their sexual orientation, human rights groups have said. A report by the international NGO ActionAid, backed by the South African Human Rights Commission, said the horrific crimes against lesbians were going unrecognised by the state and unpunished by the legal system.
The ferocity of the attack became clear in April last year when Eudy Simelane, former star of South Africa's national female football squad, became one of the victims. Simelane, one of the first women to live openly as a lesbian, was gang-raped and brutally beaten before being stabbed 25 times in the face, chest and legs.
But scores of other women have been deliberately targeted for rape.
'Will they kill me?'"Every day I am told that they are going to kill me, that they are going to rape me and after they rape me I'll become a girl," said Zakhe Sowello. "When you are raped you have a lot of evidence on your body. But when we try and report these crimes nothing happens, and then you see the boys who raped you walking free."
Research shows 86 per cent of black lesbians from the Western Cape live in fear of sexual assault. Triangle, a gay rights group, said it deals with up to 10 new cases of "corrective rape" every week. "We're seeing is a spike in the number of women coming to us having been raped and who've been told throughout the attack that being a lesbian was to blame for what was happening to them," said Vanessa Ludwig of Triangle.