A dog would have been treated better than Anene Booyson, her neighbors said.
The
17-year-old South African girl was gang raped then mutilated to death in
Bredasdorp, a tiny, rural town about two hours southeast of Cape Town,
authorities said.
It's the kind
of story that happens too often in South Africa, where a provincial official
said violence against females is "systemic." Some 71% of women report
having been victims of sexual abuse, the government notes.
But for
whatever reason -- perhaps the sheer brutality, perhaps a new awareness to the
matter -- the rape and killing of Booyson has been different. It has stirred
outrage in Bredasdorp and, in fact, throughout South Africa, from people
shocked that a young woman like Booyson could suffer so much.
A security
guard found Booyson's body February 2 at a construction site not far from where
she lived, police Capt. F.C. Van Wyk said.
Booyson's
injuries were so severe that her family asked authorities not to give details,
said Faiza Steyn, a Western Cape Health Department spokeswoman.
Booyson's
aunt, Wilma Brooks, said Booyson lived long enough to identify one of her
attackers. Brooks and Albert Fritz, Western Cape provincial minister of social
development, said the accused man had been a family friend.
"He was a
lovely child to have in the house," Brooks said. "He was her friend,
and it's just incomprehensible."
That
individual and two others have been arrested, said Fritz, who added that more
arrests could be coming. Two of those arrested have been charged with murder
and rape, the same charges the third will face, Fritz said.
Chanting
"No violence! No violence," scores in Bredasdorp marched in the
streets toward the crime scene. While statistics show that rape is common in
South Africa, residents say such violence typically doesn't come to this rural
community. Fritz called the attack "very uncharacteristic of the
town."
"This ...
murder of this incredibly young beautiful woman has become a tipping
point," he said.
Every four
minutes a local radio station broadcasts a ping -- a reminder that a person is
raped in South Africa, on average, every four minutes.
"The
whole nation is outraged at this extreme violation and destruction of a young
human life," he said. "This act is shocking, cruel and most inhumane.
It has no place in our country. We must never allow ourselves to get used to
these acts of base criminality to our women and children."
Zuma called on
the courts to "impose the harshest sentences on such crimes, as part of a
concerted campaign to end this scourge in our society."
This week, a
group of women -- some of whom did not even know Booyson -- buried a cross in
the dusty sand of a construction site in Bredasdorp where police say the girl
was raped.
The funeral
for the teenager will be Saturday. But people in her hometown, and elsewhere in
South Africa, are vowing that she will be remembered for a long time to come.
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