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Women
and girls experience many forms of sexual violence every day, in
our homes or those of parents or friends, at work, at school, in
doctor's surgeries, in churches, and on the streets.
This factsheet
has been developed to broadly cover some important concepts about
different forms of sexual violence, such as legal definitions and
terms.
If you think
you may have experienced sexual violence, or would like more information,
you can call the NSW Rape Crisis Centre, from anywhere in NSW, on
the numbers listed at the end of this factsheet. NSW Rape Crisis
Centre operates 24-hours a day.
What
is sexual assault?
Sexual assault is a crime in which there is unwanted or forced sexual
contact with another person, from someone touching you to someone
forcing you to have sex against your will.
A person can
be charged with sexual assault if he:
- puts his
finger, penis, hand or tongue, or an object, into your vagina,
anus or mouth against your will, or
- forces you
to put objects into your own vagina or anus, or
- performs
oral sex on you against your will, or makes you give him oral
sex.
A person can
also be charged with a sexual assault offence if they try or attempt
to do these things.
More information
can be found in The Law Handbook, published by Redfern Legal Centre
Publishing and available at counselling centres and libraries.
Acts
of indecency and indecent assault
In the law, sexual assault is grouped into different types of offences.
Two of the less serious are:
- acts of indecency,
where the person shows his genitals or masturbates in public
- indecent
assault, where he touches you indecently, for example on your
breasts or your genitals or anus, or makes you touch his genitals.
Aggravated
sexual assault
The person may be charged with the more serious offence of aggravated
sexual assault if:
- he physically
hurts you during a sexual assault
- you are under
16
- he uses a
weapon
- you have
a severe disability
- he is someone
in authority.
These are called
aggravating factors.
Child
sexual assault and incest
It is against the law for an adult to have sex with anyone under
16. This is called child sexual assault.
It is against
the law for a person to have sexual contact with his mother, sister,
daughter or granddaughter, whatever her age. This crime is called
incest.
Sexual
assault within marriage
This is a crime. A man does not have an automatic right to have
sex with his wife (or partner). If he does it without her consent,
he can be charged with sexual assault, even though she has been
willing to have sex with him at other times.
Sexual
harrassment
Sexual harassment can be whistles, unwanted comments, threats, verbal
abuse or unwanted exposure to sexual material.
What
is consent?
Under the law, 'consent' means that you've agreed to something freely
and voluntarily-because you want to.
- If you don't
fight back during a sexual assault, it is still sexual assault.
It's not consent just because you didn't fight back.
- If the man
threatens, frightens or tricks you into agreeing to have sex with
him-for example, he threatens to hurt someone else if you refuse-it
is sexual assault.
- You can agree
to sex and then change your mind. The reason doesn't matter. If
the man keeps going even though he knows you don't want to, it
is sexual assault.
If you are under
16 or you have a serious physical or intellectual disability, you
can't legally give consent.
Why
do rapists do it?
- Sexual assault
is used to intimidate the victim. It gives the man power over
her.
- Some men
think women and children belong to men, so they have a right to
abuse them.
Remember
- Sexual assault
is always the offender's fault, never the victim's.
- In Australia
it is against the law for anyone to force another person to have
sex, or to participate in any sexual act.
- Sexual assault
is not uncommon. It is a crime experienced by many women, many
children and some men.
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