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Sexual Harassment Victims Are Not Responsible For The Abuse -osinbajo - Crime - Nairaland

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Sexual Harassment Victims Are Not Responsible For The Abuse -osinbajo by ojokolax: 8:27pm On Sep 09, 2020
The notion that victims or potential victims of sexual harassment are architects of their fate especially by their attitude, dressing, or willingness to be in a compromising place with their violators is wrong and should be resisted in every situation. The victim must always be seen as the victim and not to be blamed.


This was the views of Vice President Yemi Osinbajo, SAN, in his contributions on Wednesday at a webinar on Anti-Sexual Harassment themed “Finding Safe Spaces for Female Students in Nigerian Universities”, organized by the Obafemi Awolowo University, Ile Ife. The event was based on the book authored by notable journalist and former presidential spokesman, Mr Olusegun Adeniyi, titled NAKED ABUSE: SEX FOR GRADES IN AFRICAN UNIVERSITIES.


According to him, “the victim must always be seen as the victim. There cannot be an excuse, especially given the power configuration between students and lecturers, that the victim could have somehow invited the abuse upon themselves. I think it is an important consideration to be made and we must not allow that notion to persist.”


Advocating stricter punishments for rape offenders especially in situations involving lecturers and their female students, Prof. Osinbajo said “there cannot be an excuse especially given the power configuration between students and lecturers that the victim could have somehow invited the abuse upon themselves. I think it is an important consideration to be made and we must not allow that notion to persist.”


Continuing, the Vice President said “there is also the comparison sometimes made between demanding bribes for service and sex for grades. Sometimes people will argue that a bribe is a bribe and there is no reason why the punishment for sex as the currency of the bribe, should be stricter than an ordinary bribe.”

Referring to Adeniyi’s book, Prof. Osinbajo said developing and adhering to a set of ethical codes of conduct for conversations and interactions involving lecturers and students in universities would greatly address the problem.


He said: “to ensure that both faculty and students are sufficiently clear about the issues and rules, there is a need for a code of conduct or ethical guidelines based on best practices in appropriate student/lecturer interactions.


“It is important that these are clearly defined in ethical guidelines that are contained in some documents that people can refer to and see. It is important both for the lecturer and the student that there is some reference to some code of conduct.”


Speaking further on ways of resolving issues around sexual harassment in Nigerian universities, Prof. Osinbajo said the search for answers to creating safe spaces for female students in universities must begin from the question of why is it that such an evidently rampant crime is so under-reported?


According to him, “there are obviously many cases of people who share their anecdotal experiences without necessarily reporting to the authorities. I think the answer is clearly that this low reportability is on account of the fact that many victims do not feel confident that they will get redress, or that they will be treated fairly or that they will not be visited with the same fearful consequences that were the subject of the demand in the first place.


“The fear that they will neither get a sympathetic nor understanding hearing, let alone justice, and that they will end up suffering the same consequences the predator had threatened would occur if they did not submit to their demands. Then there is, of course, the shame and stigma that could attend speaking up.”


“I think that in ensuring that we create safe spaces, we must do at least the basics, which is providing the support and resources they need to report abusers. Every institution must make it easy for victims or potential victims to report perpetrators to trusted formal structures or secure channels created specifically for the purpose of resolving such cases,” the Vice President added.


Prof. Osinbajo also recommended the adoption of a mandatory “well thought-out whistleblower process emphasizing confidentiality, professional legal and medical help for victims or potential victims.”


Dignitaries who also spoke at the webinar besides Adeniyi, the Guest Speaker, included the Deputy Senate President, Senator Ovie Omo-Agege; the Kwara State Governor, Alhaji Abdulrahman Abdulrazaq; the First Lady of Ekiti State, Mrs Bisi Adeleye-Fayemi; and the Vice Chancellor of OAU, Prof. Eyitope Ogunbode.

Meanwhile, in another development, Prof. Osinbajo has underscored the synergy between the legislature and the executive in supporting policies and programmes of the administration especially those geared towards boosting the nation’s economic base.

The Vice President stated this on Wednesday at a virtual Citizens’ Dialogue on the Green Imperative Project. The Green Imperative Project is a bilateral initiative between the Federal Government of Nigeria and the Brazilian government to develop Nigeria’s agricultural production base through a mechanization programme that is spread across the 774 Local Government Areas in the country.

Re: Sexual Harassment Victims Are Not Responsible For The Abuse -osinbajo by Deputy1111(m): 8:36pm On Sep 09, 2020
shocked
Re: Sexual Harassment Victims Are Not Responsible For The Abuse -osinbajo by TheRareGem1(f): 8:37pm On Sep 09, 2020
There is no telling the fact sexual harassment in school and workplace assault can adversely affect women as well as even take its unpleasant toll on women’s lives to unimaginable levels. As a matter of fact, one will be attempting to say the obvious to assert that sexual harassment in our schools and workplace assault have serious implications on women. Employers, lecturers, teachers and government can working together towards eradicating this menace that has become rampant in our society.
Re: Sexual Harassment Victims Are Not Responsible For The Abuse -osinbajo by Deborah98(f): 8:38pm On Sep 09, 2020
Whatever it is,rape, sexual molestation, harassment and the rest are evil,barbaric, demonic and whoever indulges in such act should repent and come out of it ...
Re: Sexual Harassment Victims Are Not Responsible For The Abuse -osinbajo by Joylove2324(f): 8:38pm On Sep 09, 2020
smiley
Re: Sexual Harassment Victims Are Not Responsible For The Abuse -osinbajo by Moneywirer: 2:29am On Sep 10, 2020
No matter how provocative or suggestive the lady dresses, in the end it boils down to self control on the side of the man.
But on the other hand it just seems as if we men were designed by default to always be on the receiving end. We are expected to take the blame for everything.
A lady harasses a man publicly, puts her hand on him, no one bats an eye.
But a man does less than half of that and you'd see even his fellow men goes berserk on him.
Re: Sexual Harassment Victims Are Not Responsible For The Abuse -osinbajo by Mynd44: 4:39am On Sep 10, 2020

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