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New research may reveal the true extent of statutory rape in SA

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A recent episode of Mzanzi Magic’s popular “Our Perfect Wedding” prompted a complaint to the Broadcasting Complaints Commission of South Africa (BCCSA) after it featured a bride and groom who met when she was just 14 years old and he was a taxi driver twice her age.

When interviewed on the show, the groom boasted about sleeping with up to four young school girls a day.

Read: What to do if you are raped 
 
Following numerous public apologies by the show as well as meetings with complaints, the BCCSA has dismissed the complaint.  “Our Perfect Wedding” may be off the hook, but the show’s controversial episode is a reminder of similar stories of girls the country over.

One of them is 15-year-old Nthabiseng van Rooyen* from the Free State.  
 
“I was dating this 30-year-old taxi driver for some time,” Van Rooyen said. “I guess I only dated him because he was giving me money.”
 
In South Africa, the legal age of consent is 16 years old, according to Lisa Vetten, a research associate with the Wits Institute for Social and Economic Research.  
 
While the law takes care to try to avoid criminalising consensual sex between consenting minors who are within two years in age of each other, the law is clear that cases like Van Rooyen’s amount to statutory rape. However, Vetten added that these cases can be hard to prosecute and young girls may not want to incriminate men they think they love.

“At that age, you don’t have that much life experience it’s very easy to think you’re in love,” she said.
 
“What also makes these cases potentially difficult is that they happen at an age when children and parents are in conflict with each other,” Vetten added.

Read: How do you report rape when the police don't take you seriously?

“Having an older boyfriend gives you status and access to particular things,” she added.  “It makes you think you're an adult and if it annoys your parents, you may think that is a wonderful side effect”
 
Although Van Rooyen has alleged the man also raped her, the family has yet to lay charges. The law requires anyone with knowledge of a statutory rape to report the crime.
 
“He took advantage of me while I was drunk and I found myself naked in the blankets the next morning,” Van Rooyen said. “I put on my clothes and went home, but after a few weeks I felt so sick and even missed my period,” she said.
 
“Now that I am pregnant he is avoiding me like we never even knew each other.”
 
If successfully prosecuted, the father of Van Rooyen’s unborn baby would face a minimum sentence.

About 72,000 teenagers give birth each year in South Africa, according to the Health Systems Trust latest District Health Barometer.
 
According to Vetten, no one knows how many cases of statutory rape are reported and how many perpetrators are convicted annually, however she is currently part of a study that is reviewing 2012 data to produce a snapshot of statutory rape figures. The study’s results are expected to be released in 2016.  
 
In the meantime, Van Rooyen and her family are trying to cope with another mouth to feed.
 
“My mother doesn't work and … we live on our grant money and my grandmother’s pension money and still, it's not enough for all of us,” said the teen. “To top it off now, I am going to have a baby.” – Health-e News.
 
* Name withheld to protect the identity of the child

Also read:

Rape within families remains under-reported

Male rape still considered a joke in South Africa

Students create nail polish that detects date rape drugs

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