Mummy Buzz

Dec
04
2014

Project97 Reveals Shocking Canadian Sexual Assault Stats

Canadians may be "nice" but we're not exempt from criminal behaviour

Canadians are generally enlightened, but we're not beyond reproach - not at all. After all, numbers speak volumes: 472,000: that's the number women who reported being sexually assaulted in this country. And that's only those who spoke up. How about 97? That's the percentage of assaults that are never recorded as crimes. 

That stat was disturbing enough to prompt magazines from Rogers Media, including Chatelaine, Today's Parent, Flare and Macleans, to embark on a year-long project "examining Canada’s staggering problems with sexual violence."

Being A Juror On A Rape Trial Changed This Woman's View On Sexual Assault

This isn't about Ghomeshi or Cosby. But certainly those cases got Canadians talking. All these people you know and some you barely know—your sister, your mother, your best friend, the woman across the road...they  all have stories - and maybe you do, too - and many are finally sharing them.

Why didn't women come forward in the former cases? That was the question skeptics posed when said mega-stars were accused of sexual assault. And a hornet nest opened. The reasons, as it turns out, are as long as your arm.

Even when the person who hurt you isn't famous, or powerful, the idea of coming forward is fraught with complications. Too often the tables turn. Victims feel the spotlight shift. What were you wearing? Were you drinking? What did you do to provoke it?

Like When The NYPD Told Women To Cover Up

Because the default position of many was that surely you must have been at least partially responsible for bringing this horrible thing that happened onto yourself.

97 percent not recorded as crimes.

And even if you do go through with it, and have to live through the incident all over again, will you actually find justice? As Chatelaine points out, many women feel that instead of offering them protection, the legal system is biased and ultimately will not serve them.

“The best solution, if there is such a thing, is for people to know that it’s not going to be quiet anymore,” said Toronto MPP, Cheri DiNovo, who as part of the project admitted to being raped by an ex-boyfriend. “This is not going to be hush-hush.”

We applaud these media players for continuing the conversation that has just begun in Canada. Check out Project97. Let's all do our part to bring down that number.