AFRICA: 'Sexually-transmitted grades' kills quality education

DAKAR, 10 October 2008 (IRIN) - Sexual exploitation in African schools has
become so widespread that children have come up with their own terms to
refer to sexual relations with their teachers.

>From 'Sexually Transmitted Grades' to 'BF', or bordel fatigue, which refers
to exhaustion from multiple sexual activities with teachers, this slang
hints at the prevalence of exploitation in Africa's learning environments.

The lexis of abuse was discovered during research for Plan International's
(PI) latest report, 'Learn Without Fear,' part of the organisation's global
campaign to end violence in schools.

"We've been aware of the problem for a long time but we've had to just go
on anecdotal evidence of violence and its effects," John Chaloner, PI
Regional Director for West and Central Africa, told IRIN. "What this report
has done is to talk to children, to teachers and to parents. So now we're
dealing with evidence not hearsay".

Drop out danger

As schools reopen throughout Africa, the report reveals alarmingly high
levels of violence, which are undermining government efforts to provide
quality education. The report concluded many girls and boys are dropping
out of school as a result of sexual abuse and corporal punishment.

"Our teachers should be there to teach us and not to touch us where we
don't want," a 15 year-old girl from Uganda told PI, "I feel like
disappearing from the world if a person who is supposed to protect me,
instead destroys me".

According to the report, research in Uganda found that eight per cent of 16
and 17 year-olds had had sex with their teachers. In South Africa, at least
one-third of all child rapes are by school staff. In a survey of ten
villages in Benin, 34 per cent of children confirmed sexual violence in
their schools.

While boys usually suffer more violent - and possibly deadly - corporal
punishment at the hands of their teachers than their female classmates,
sexual harassment and exploitation appear to be overwhelmingly carried out
against girls. The report found girls are vulnerable to attacks not only
from teachers and other care givers, but also from male students, either at
school or on the journey to or from school.

"Teachers often justified the sexual exploitation of female students by
saying that their clothes and behaviour were provocative, and that they,
the teachers, were far from home and in sexual need," according to PI's
report.

Sex exchange

What can appear a 'grey area' in this situation is the apparent collusion
of some female students.

'Africell', or 'a free sell' has been coined to describe girls who do not
wear underwear to provoke teachers into sexual activities in exchange for
good grades or 'sexually transmittable means' - food, school materials or
school fees.

But these girls are not the instigators, said Atoumane Diaw, Secretary
General of the National Union of Elementary Teaching in Senegal.

"These children are often encouraged by their parents. Do you think a ten
year-old is going to buy herself 'sexy' clothes? No, it is the system, it
is society that is corrupt. These poor families need [financial] help so
they won't put themselves into this situation".

In addition to financial assistance, Diaw suggested practical measures for
schools: "A modest uniform for students so everyone looks the same.
Separate toilets for boys, girls or teachers. And surveillance so that the
teacher is not left alone with a pupil after class".

Poverty facilitates the abuse, according to PI. Children are increasingly
responsible for the economic welfare of their families; teachers are often
underpaid, or not paid at all, with some seeing sexual favours from
students as 'compensation'.

Authors of the report noted that in many African cultures, corporal
punishment is often viewed as an acceptable form of discipline. Social
norms that encourage male aggression and female passivity are also seen to
champion various forms of violence against girls.

Speak out

"We need to educate people so we tackle the problem [of violence] before it
happens." said Atoumane Diaw. "Our campaign is.raising awareness with
teachers. We're educating children about their rights and their worth. Laws
have to be harmonised and enforced in different countries. We must go
forward together, fight together."

The Kenyan education ministry recently launched guidelines on school safety
after a recent deadly spate of high school student riots.

Violence in schools, and particularly sexual violence, is chronically
under-reported because of cultural norms, students' feeling of shame, and
because they do not know in whom they can confide, according to PI's
report. It adds teachers are often reluctant to report colleagues' abuse.

"As adults, we need to be watchful, we need to be alert." PI's John
Chaloner told IRIN, "Children need outlets, like help lines, so they can
express themselves. We need to get the message out so that children will no
longer be harmed by the very people who should be protecting them".

aw/hb/pt/

[END]



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