LAST year a brutal gang-rape on a bus in Delhi caused outrage in India.
On September 10th the woman’s attackers were convicted of rape and murder. The case
has brought new attention to violence against women in India. Unfortunately,
the situation in neighbouring countries is none too bright, according to new research in the Lancet Global
Health, a medical journal. More than one in ten men surveyed in six Asian
countries said they had raped a woman who was not their partner—and that figure
rose to nearly one in four when wives and girlfriends were included among
victims. The study, part of a United Nations project, is the first to give a
comprehensive tally of rape in several Asian countries. The researchers
surveyed more than 10,000 men in Bangladesh, Cambodia, China, Indonesia, Papua
New Guinea and Sri Lanka. The men, aged 18-49, met male interviewers. They were
never asked about “rape” explicitly; instead they were asked if they had
“forced a woman who was not your wife or girlfriend at the time to have sex”.
The answer varied from 4% in Bangladesh to a staggering 41% in Papua New Guinea.
Shockingly, more than one in seven rapists committed their first rape when they
were younger than 15. More than half did so before the age of 20. Only 55%
reported feeling guilty, and less than one-quarter were sent to prison.
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