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IMF rape case: Victim-bashing run amok
By Earl Ofari
Hutchinson
New America Media
May 20, 2011
Former International Monetary Fund (IMF)
managing director Dominique Strauss-Kahn loudly declared that he did not
rape a maid in his hotel room during his stay in New York. Strauss-Kahn
is certainly entitled to proclaim his innocence, and under the law he is
just that: Innocent until proven guilty. But the same can’t be said for
his alleged victim, who has been tried, convicted, sentenced, and
pilloried relentlessly in the press and on the web since the moment her
accusations went public.
There’s no mystery why. From the beginning, there were four things that
made the accuser ripe for the race baiting and victim bashing now being
carried out by the media, French officials, some African writers and the
general public: First, she is a low-wage domestic worker. Second, she is
a West African immigrant, whose legal status has been subject to
question. Third, she allegedly resided in a Bronx apartment building
that caters exclusively to the HIV/AIDS afflicted, inferring that she
too is HIV positive. Fourth, and most importantly, she is a black
woman.
Strauss-Kahn, however, is rich, powerful, politically connected at the
highest levels and popular with the French public. His defenders have
blithely ignored his checkered history of sexual bad behavior and have
dug deep into the apologist bin to claim that he is the victim of an
anti-Semitic conspiracy involving everyone from French President Nicolas
Sarkozy to unnamed political enemies. Their motive, supposedly, is to
derail his bid to become president of France, a post for which he is
widely regarded a front-runner. And the conspiracy theory has legs: A
recent poll cited by the French public radio service RFI found that
nearly 60 percent of those surveyed believe Strauss-Kahn was “set up.”
From a purely legal standpoint, none of these things have any relevance
to the actual charge of rape. Either Strauss-Kahn did or didn’t commit
the act. But it’s never that simple. Race was bound to cast a long
shadow over the accusation -- even if Strauss-Kahn’s alleged victim had
none of the aforementioned strikes against her, and even if Strauss-Kahn
was not a rich, politically powerful figure with a history of sexual
improprieties.
Women's groups have waged a relentless and often times frustrating fight
to get police, prosecutors, courts and the media to treat rape as a
serious crime, especially in scenarios where the victims are poor, black
or minority women and the alleged attackers are white males. They have
endured a long history of gender and race stereotypes that depict black
women as sexually loose, available, and crime prone. In decades past,
that stereotype made police hesitant to make arrests and prosecutors
reluctant to vigorously prosecute rape cases when the victims were black
women. This put women, particularly black women, at greater risk of
sexual attack, and virtually assured that authorities would turn a blind
eye to the perpetrators.
Strauss-Kahn, in the not-too-distant past, likely would have benefited
from the official blind-eye to a rape charge filed by a black woman. If
arrested, he would have quickly posted bail and winged his way back to
France. His accuser would have been painted as a gold-digging liar of
tainted character. Race would have lurked beneath the character
assassination and would have been used in order to make the slur against
her believable.
This is exactly what’s being done now, even though authorities slapped
Strauss-Kahn in a jail cell and initially denied him bail. The battle
lines over whether he is truly a sexual predator or an innocent victim
of a money scam, a set-up, or a politically motivated attack will heat
up in the coming days if and when the name and picture of Strauss-Kahn’s
alleged victim is “leaked.” It will be plastered over blogs and websites
and the rumor mill will churn overtime, feeding on every tidbit of
gossip, allegation, and distorted fact about the alleged victim. She
will be retried and re-convicted again in the press. The image assault
will be dutifully punctuated with a choice quote from Strauss-Kahn’s
attorneys that he is a victim and a target, and that it’s incredulous
that a man of his name and prestige, with so much to lose, would stoop
to have sex with a maid, and -- unstated but strongly inferred -- a
black maid at that.
The case and the subsequent trial will continue to stir passions and
resentments, and will be yet another object lesson that when the alleged
victim is a black female and the accused attacker is a white male,
politics, race and passion always collide. The lines will be
deliberately blurred over the question of who is the real victim. In
this case, for much of the public, it won’t be Strauss-Kahn’s alleged
victim.
Earl Ofari Hutchinson is an author and political analyst. He is an
associate editor of New America Media. He is host of the weekly
Hutchinson Report Newsmaker Hour on KTYM Radio Los Angeles streamed on
ktym.com podcast on blogtalkradio.com and internet TV broadcast onthehutchinsonreportnews.com
Follow Earl Ofari Hutchinson on Twitter:
http://twitter.com/earlhutchinson
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