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Judi Lynn

(160,542 posts)
Tue Oct 30, 2012, 03:09 PM Oct 2012

Rape in the military: exposing the shocking truth

Rape in the military: exposing the shocking truth

The groundbreaking film The Invisible War exposes the shocking level of sexual abuse against women in the US military. Its concerns about rape are echoed in the UK

Alexandra Topping
The Guardian, Monday 29 October 2012 16.00 EDT

'He hit me across the left side of my face … and my face hurt so bad. He screamed at me and he grabbed my arm and he raped me." Kori Cioca's heartbreaking account of her rape by a commanding officer while serving in the US Coast Guard is not the most shocking part of her testimony. Following the attack, Cioca was told by her superiors that if she went forward with her case she would be court-martialed for lying; her assailant, who admitted the attack but denied rape, then received just 30 days of base restriction and loss of pay and the US Department of Defense continues to refuse to pay for the surgery she needs for the nerve damage to her face.

Cioca is just one of the women interviewed in The Invisible War, a feature-length documentary that lifts the lid on the abuse of women in the US military and which got its first UK screening in the Frontline Club in London last week.

The film has raised similar concerns this side of the Atlantic that rape is a hidden scourge in the military. According to figures released to Labour MP Madeleine Moon, a rape or sexual assault is reported by a member of the armed forces every week. Over the past two and a half years, there have been 53 reported rapes and 86 reported sexual assaults in the army, the navy and the air force, but Moon believes the figure is an underestimation and could be as many as an attack a day.

Between 2001-2011, Ministry of Defence figures show 56 members of the armed forces were court-martialed for sexual offences – of these, just 16 resulted in a conviction.


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Rape in the military: exposing the shocking truth (Original Post) Judi Lynn Oct 2012 OP
Another example of money trumping peace. midnight Oct 2012 #1
My daughter, an M.D. served as a Navy COLGATE4 Oct 2012 #2
Du rec. Nt xchrom Oct 2012 #3

COLGATE4

(14,732 posts)
2. My daughter, an M.D. served as a Navy
Tue Oct 30, 2012, 03:35 PM
Oct 2012

Doc at a Marine base in the Mid-East. She told me that, far and away the most prevalent health complaint by all female military personnel, enlisted and officers alike was urinary tract infections caused by 'holding it' overnight so as to not have to go out to the head for fear of being raped. Nice.

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