Photo: Ana Santos/ IRIN. The threat of sexual violence prevents girls in PNG from attending school
Source: IRIN
PORT MORESBY, 6 April 2012 (IRIN) - In the Pacific nation of Papua New
Guinea (PNG) sexual violence against young girls, and the shame and
stigma that follows, is forcing many out of school and others into early
marriage.
A recent study
by Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF), one of the country’s main providers
of medical and psychological assistance to survivors of family and
sexual violence, showed that from 2008 to 2011, a significant proportion
of patients who received treatment as a result of violence were
children, some under the age of five.
In the rural settlement of Tari, 31 percent of those who reported
violence were between five and 12 years old. In Lae, the second biggest
city after the capital, Port Moresby, 26 percent were between the ages
of 13 and 17.
Almost half of those reporting sexual violence In Lae from January 2008
to June 2010 - some 520 people - were under 18 years old. In Tari, 248
were minors, said Patrick Almeida, MSF’s medical coordinator.
“In both places, in over 70 percent of the cases, the perpetrators were known by the survivors,” he added.
“It’s really bad,” said Ume Wainetti, head of the NGO, Family Sexual Violence Action Centre (FSVAC), based in Port Moresby.
Young girls are already disadvantaged when it comes to education, and
the threat of rape and sexual abuse aggravates these inequalities. As it
is, parents generally hesitate to send their daughters to school
because they will just get married and have babies. Boys will carry on
the family name and continue to work,” Wainetti said.
The 2010 UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organization (UNESCO) Education Digest
listed PNG as one of 16 countries worldwide with “severe” gender
disparities. In PNG, boys are at least 10 percent more likely to start
the first year of primary school than girls.
Gross enrolment rates in 2009 were close to 82 percent for boys, but
only 74 percent for girls, according to the UN Children’s Fund (UNICEF).
The cost of tuition is one of the main reasons for the gap, according to UNICEF. In 2009 the government adopted a plan to gradually phase out school fees by 2015, when it expects to fully fund basic education.
A dangerous path
The remote locations of schools have even greater implication for girls, noted UNICEF.
“Some kids have to walk for hours to get to school and the journey on
the way to school makes them vulnerable to attack, especially for
girls,” said Joseph Logha, Department of Education assistant secretary.
“The experience of sexual violence definitely affects a girl’s education
in terms of being able to stay in school and school performance,” said
Ruth Kauffman, MSF project coordinator at a Family Support Centre in
Lae.
These donor-funded hospital-based centres are intended to be safe houses and “one-stop shops” for survivors of violence for medical, psychosocial and legal assistance.
“If a girl is raped, she may be blamed and beaten by family members. If
she gets pregnant, she misses one year of school and may not be able to
go back. Even if she doesn’t [fall pregnant], she’s already a different
person. The trauma makes it difficult for her to concentrate on school
work,” Kauffman said.
In some cases, the girl is married off to the perpetrator for a “bride
price”- similar to a dowry. “Some communities see marrying her to the
offender as a way to make him accountable for his behaviour, without
considering the additional emotional trauma that the child will suffer,”
said Elaine Bainard, UNICEF’s chief of child protection in PNG.
Wainetti said one way of ending a culture of violence is to change
people seeing violence against women as a given. The NGO has recruited
more than 1,000 male volunteers of varying ages nationwide to receive
“gender sensitivity” training.
“Some witnessed violence and did not like seeing how their mothers were
treated,” Wainetti said. “They want to have a role in ending that cycle,
and this is a start.”