WOMEN: DSK Rape Case - It's Far, Far From Over - Right On! Fight On!

DSK Rape Case

Takeaway No. 6:

Alleged Victims

Can Change the Script

Photo: Mario Tama/Getty Images

Monday, July 11 2011, 10:30 AM EST 

 

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Last week, a variety of media harped on the imminent demise of the rape case against former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn because of his accuser’s so-called credibility problems. Despite the backlash (and in notable cases the backlash to the backlash) against her, the Guinean Sofitel housekeeper isn’t going away quietly.

She proved that last Wednesday when she rightfully sued Rupert Murdoch’s New York Post for libel. From a copy of the filing, which refers to stories and headlines like, “DSK MAID A HOOKER: ‘Took care’ of guests on the side”:

“In, several news articles published in both the hard copy and online editions of the New York Post on July 2, 2011, July 3, 2011 and July 4, 2011, Defendants falsely, maliciously and with reckless disregard for the truth stated as a fact that the Plaintiff is a ‘prostitute,’ ‘hooker,’ ‘working girl” and/or ‘routinely traded sex for money with male guests’ of the Sofitel hotel located in Manhattan. Defendants also falsely stated in the New York Post that the Plaintiff recently engaged in acts of prostitution with various men at a hotel located in Brooklyn following the sexual assault and while under the protection of the Manhattan District Attorney’s Office and that she was turning tricks on the taxpayers’ dime.”

What makes the prostitution accusation so egregious is that it’s based on the word of an unidentified source on or affiliated with Dominique Strauss-Kahn’s investigative team. It rests on quotes like:

“There is information … of her getting extraordinary tips, if you know what I mean. And it’s not for bringing extra f—king towels,” a source close to the defense investigation said.

and this:

The woman also had “a lot of her expenses — hair braiding, salon expenses — paid for by men not related to her,” the source said.”

I don’t know how the New York Post reporters, editors, copy editors and graphic designers responsible for this hack job can sleep soundly at night. Then again, they’re on the same team as News of the World, the Rupert Murdoch-backed tabloid forced out of business after 168 years because its reporters were caught paying corrupt cops for tips and hacking into the voice mails of the families of terrorist attack victims and fallen soldiers. (So far, three people have been arrested, including Andy Coulson, a former editor who has also served as a communications director for British Prime Minster David Cameron.)

Whatever the outcome of her libel case, DSK’s alleged victim has managed to interrupt a dangerous script the defense wrote, the prosecution capitulated to and the media parroted. And actually DSK—who is also facing attempted rape charges brought by his ex-wife’s goddaughter in France—should thank her. Because if the housekeeper he admitted having a sexual encounter with is a prostitute, you know what that would make him? A married 62-year-old john who goes to lunch with his daughter after paying a woman half his age for sex.

Who’s winning with that?

Extra: Read about a Harlem-based gathering in support of a vigorous trial here.

 

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New York Post

prostitution story

gets shakier

The New York Post’s “scoop” on Dominique Strauss Kahn’s accuser is getting fishier, to the extent that’s possible. The paper appears to have had documentation challenging the reliability of its only source in a story alleging that the accuser had worked as a prostitute.

To reprise the tabloid’s story: The New York Post reported on July 2 that DSK’s accuser had worked as a prostitute — a piece that triggered an immediate libel suit from the woman. For its salacious bit of reportage, the newspaper relied on a single, anonymous person, identified as “a source close to the defense investigation.”

The source coughed up two key details:

1) That the accuser did special favors for male guests at the Sofitel Hotel and received compensation in return;

2) That her union had placed her there because it knew she would “bring in big bucks.”

After floating that second allegation, the New York Post wrote nearly 30 paragraphs of copy blasting the accuser from various angles. Then it dropped in a denial of the union claim. “These allegations are absurd,” the paper quoted union spokesman Josh Gold as saying. “She never registered at our hiring hall. We never sent her for a single interview. We absolutely did not place her at the hotel and we do not track tips.”

And that’s pretty much the way it was left: The New York Post’s anonymous source versus a named union spokesperson.

What was left unsaid was that the union had sent documents — an employment packet, basically — to the New York Post supporting its contentions about the accuser, according to Gold. The file included the accuser’s application for work at the Sofitel, plus a cursory evaluation by management.

Clues as to how the woman may have ended up looking for work at the Sofitel are in the papers. The application asks how the applicant had learned of the hotel; the woman checked a box for “Agency.” In the “references” portion of the application, the woman put down a worker with the International Rescue Committee (IRC), an agency that assists refugees with employment, among other things. When contacted about the accuser, IRC declined comment, citing policy not to talk about individual cases.

Nowhere on the form did the applicant mention a union.

So did the New York Post review the documents that the union claims to have passed along? That’s hard to say. Several of my inquiries to the paper have ended in frustration — most commonly with a reference to the paper’s PR shop. An e-mail to New York Post spokesperson Suzanne Halpin hasn’t yet fetched a response.

The back-and-forth between the union and the New York Post may explain something about the accuser’s libel suit. Lawyers for the accuser allege that “Defendant New York Post knew, or should have known” that statements in the story were “false before it was published.”

To use the paper’s own language, this “stunning new info”casts doubts on whether the woman was a “hooker,” “working girl,” not to mention a “scam artist.” The hotel manager who reviewed her, by the way, checked boxes on the evaluation form alongside “Speaks well, expresses ideas adequately”; “Sincere desire to work”; and “Likeable.” On the “overall impression,” the woman scored a “very good.”

By Erik Wemple  |  11:29 AM ET, 07/11/2011

>via: http://www.washingtonpost.com/blogs/erik-wemple/post/new-york-post-prostituti...

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Violence Against Migrant Women

Won’t End After DSK Case


 

Only now are experts beginning to understand the profound effects of rape as a weapon of war in areas like the Democratic Republic of Congo. Steve Evans/Creative Commons

Tuesday, July 12 2011, 10:06 AM EST


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The media circus surrounding the Dominique Strauss-Kahn rape case dishes out more drama each day, with a side of lurid fascination. But we basically know how the story ends. The narrative of the immigrant housekeeper assaulted by a European official perfectly illustrates an axiom of violence and power: the wider the gap between genders and races, the greater the latitude of injustice.

Yet the same story plays out every day on an endless loop around the globe: a retaliatory rape against a young girl sends a warning to the enemy militia; a wife is pummeled into bloody silence, her bedroom beyond the purview of traditional local courts; a daughter is married off to pay down a farm debt. The stories weave into a pattern that a media-fatigued public has come to normalize.

To resensitize us to those numbing tragedies, an annual report of Minority Rights Group Internationaldocuments the cruel synergy between being a woman and being the other on every continent. Young girls from the rural hill tribes of Thailand, who lack full citizenship rights, are “easy prey” for forced sex trafficking. Canadian First Nations women, long alienated from mainstream society, suffer epidemic rates of sexual assault as well as HIV/AIDS infection. Sexual and gender minority status often compound each other, as with the rash of “corrective rapes” targeting lesbians in South Africa.

Women of marginalized ethnicities suffer violence at the hands of their own, as well. Domestic violence is rampant in some indigenous communities, according to MRI, in large part because mainstream legal structures provide no protection or access to justice. The resulting erosion of the social fabric feeds into racialized stereotypes of moral deviance.

Tactical Rape

Rape has always been a potent tool for demarcating difference. During the war on indigenous Mayans that exploded across Guatemala a generation ago, MRI notes, mass rape was part of a military strategy to destroy communities from within:

According to the Truth Commission, the most under-reported human rights violation was the rape of indigenous women. No overall estimates as to the number of women affected exist. Of the 1,465 cases of rape that were documented by the Commission, 88.7 percent were of Mayan women and girls of all ages. As one survivor states: ‘it’s the campesinos, the Indians, who get raped because they used to say we were animals, that’s why they did it to us, because they thought we were worthless’.

The pattern plays out today in conflict zones like the Democratic Republic of Congo. Mark Lattimer, executive director of MRI, told Colorlines:

We’re only now beginning to understand just how profound the effect can be when rape is used as a weapon of war. And from our point of view, looking specifically at the rights of minorities, we can see that in about three-quarters of the world’s conflicts today, most of the violence is targeted either by ethnicity or by religion. So overwhelmingly, women who are being subjected to systematic sexual violence are from a particular ethnic or religious group that’s being targeted.

Yakın Erturkm, former United Nations special rapporteur on violence against women, describes violence against women as a threat coming from both inside and outside their communities:

As members of a minority group, they may be assaulted by members of the majority population and/or by agents of the state. … Such assaults, in turn, leave women in danger of further abuse and ostracism from within their own communities, where—due to a rigid, patriarchal morality code—they are accused of having “dishonored” themselves and their families.

Globalization breeds the impunity that enables violence against women. In countries that rely on imported labor—say, the United States—migrant women work in a shadow economy and live outside the law.

In Malaysia, for instance, reports of beatings and sexual abuse suffered by Indonesian domestic workers were widespread enough to prompt international intervention and attempts to reform labor regulations. Indonesia recently halted labor-export programs to Malaysia and Saudi Arabia, which is also known for its brutality to migrants. But in the end, the structure of discrimination remains intact, and one group of desperate workers is swapped for another. Human Rights Watch reports that in 2009, when Indonesia blocked workers from migrating to Malaysia, “recruiters from Malaysia turned to Cambodian workers instead.”

Sometimes, an ethnic or sectarian battle line hides gender oppression. As we’ve seen in the wake of the Arab Spring uprisings, as gender-based violence persists despite social change, women swept up in a popular struggle can become stuck in a “liberated” society on old constructs of patriarchy.

At Ms. Magazine blog, Lauren Bohn, recounted a moment at a March protest in Cairo’s Tahrir Square that revealed that for many women, the revolution had not overturned a male-dominated power structure:

Reporting of that day has focused on the subsequent clashes between Christian and Muslim men. But what I saw first were men intent on breaking up the women’s protest. “Go home,” one sheik, hoisted on the shoulders of another man, told women. Others shouted slogans such as “Not valid!” that had been used against Mubarak in the same space just weeks earlier. One man held up a sign reading “Not now,” arguing to me that the demonstrations were “instruments of the West.”

Redraw the Line

But more and more, women themselves are drawing their own battle line on two fronts, calling for empowerment of their communities as well as their own self-determination. The U.N. Organization for Women presents one example of an indigenous women’s movement in Ecuador that fuses progress and tradition in an evolving legal system.

Traditionally, [indigenous community laws and] regulations have not addressed issues of violence against women. So, the women have developed their own ‘Regulations for Good Living’ (Reglamentos de Buena Convivencia). …They aim to regulate family and community life and are in line with indigenous justice principles in relation to rehabilitation and reintegration.

While the regulations leave the adjudication of serious crimes such as rape to state authorities, they condemn forms of physical, psychological and sexual violence, as well as restrictions on women’s participation in public affairs and economic activities. Both men and women have been trained to promote the regulations in indigenous and state justice forums to increase women’s access to justice and the realization of their rights.

The adage that you can judge a society’s level of civility by the way it treats its women, tells only part of the story. It’s true that systems of violence make excellent use of women’s bodies—as weapons of war, currency for exploitation, or objects of genocide. But the strength borne of that violence can militate against tragedy, when women become the sheer embodiment of survival.