Thousands of protesters rallied outside the Johannesburg Stock Exchange Friday to protest staggering levels of violence against women in South Africa after a spate of recent killings and rapes fueled civil unrest over the issue.
Protesters carried placards with messages including “My body is not your war zone,” and “We should not need protection to survive in our streets and our homes.”
Images and videos of the action, which kicked of before dawn, were shared on Twitter with the hashtag #SandtonShutdown.
“Business can no longer continue as an innocent bystander,” wrote advocacy group Action Aid South Africa wrote in a tweet explaining the choice of the financial center as a target.
From BBC News:
New national police data underscores the depth of the problem.
Over 41,000 rapes were committed in the year ending March 2019—an increase of almost 4 percent from the previous year. Over 2,700 women were also murdered in the time frame. That amounts to a woman being murdered every three hours, Bloomberg noted.
Catalyzing the recent surge of protests was the brutal murder and rape of university student Uyinene Mrwetyana by a Cape Twon post office employee. The attack reportedly occurred when she was checking on a package.
Her murder, and recent others, have been a flash point, triggering protests including one last week that blocked the entrance to the World Economic Forum in Cape Town and launching the #AmINext movement.
“Every week, there is a story in South Africa that should stop us in our tracks—a newspaper report detailing what feels like a freak detonation of psychotic, demented violence against women, a one-off explosion of hate that somehow just keeps on happening,” Cape Town-based writer Rosa Lyster wrote at The New Yorker.
Referring to Mrwetyana’s murder, Lyster continued, “Confronted with the reality of how she died, and the knowledge that ‘the post office;’ must now be added to the long list of places to be scared of, women around the country are reaching what feels like a breaking point.”
“Mrwetyana’s death, so grotesquely emblematic of the state’s failure to protect women and children,” wrote Lyster, “seems to have channeled the anger that so many feel and directed it toward a clear target. The feeling that someone should do something is turning, quickly, into the conviction that someone is going to have to.”