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Previous Entries

July 18, 2007

Rape? Not funny.

Posted by shawnsyms at 09:28 PM ET | Comments (0)

Rape is never funny. (Perhaps unless you are Sarah Silverman. But that's a whole other post.)

Rape doesn't become funny when the target is a man. And in particular, it's not funny when the target is a male prisoner. Jokes about dropping the soap in the penitentiary shower room? Not funny.

If someone you disapprove of—ethically or politically—is going to jail, it's not appropriate to speculate in a supportive way that he might get raped while in prison. Sexual assault should not be considered vigilante justice. Rape is also not a metaphor for anything else.

Author T.J. Parcell recently penned a memoir of his experiences in a Michigan prison from 1978 till 1982. Purcell was jailed at age 17. He spoke up 25 years later after walking into a video store and witnessing a group of young boys laughing at a depiction of prison rape.

Parsell's first day in the general population, he was drugged and anally raped by a gang of men. Then the perpetrators flipped a coin to determine whose "property" he would become. It got worse from there. The reality of prison rape is that it's a brutal form of social control and sexual violence wielded against the prisoners least able to defend themselves.

No one deserves to be raped.

More entries on: Prisons

May 29, 2007

HIV? Thanks, officer.

Posted by shawnsyms at 09:38 AM ET | Comments (5)

Police crackdowns on drug use lead to increases in HIV transmission. This assertion is supported by "Do Not Cross," a just-released report from the Canadian HIV/AIDS Legal Network.

To avoid HIV, hepatitis, abcesses and other health problems, ideally an injection drug user should use a new, clean needle each time. But when people are afraid of being thrown in jail, they avoid carrying needles on their person, re-use them often, and hide them in dirty places—bushes, garbage cans—to avoid detection. They inject as quickly as possible to reduce the risk of getting caught in the act, often injuring themselves in the process. They can be forced to store their drugs in any available bodily orifice on approach of the cops, which is harmful and dangerous. In some cases, they may switch from smoking to injecting a drug like heroin, even though this is riskier, because it can done faster and requires less of the drug itself.

When people are displaced to random neighbourhoods as part of anti-drug legal strategies, they have less access to support services and clean needles, and they may introduce others to drug use and attendent harms who would not have otherwise been exposed.

And when drug users end up in jail, they suffer from a variety of HIV-related harm and risk, including "lack of access to clean syringes or sterilizing materials in prison, lack of access to information and education on HIV/AIDS, lack of reliable access to opioid substitution therapy, lack of access to condoms, failure to prevent sexual violence and coercion, and interruption of antiretroviral treatment." The last point is an important one: HIV treatment is a form of HIV prevention, as a person on anti-HIV meds is less likely to transmit the virus to someone else.

Not all drug users are affected equally by police crackdowns. As Do Not Cross author Joanne Csete notes, "Those who have the most marginal housing, the lowest income and the least developed social networks will be most at risk." Read the whole report here.

More entries on: HIV/AIDS | Harm reduction | Prisons



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