South Africa sexual violence protesters target stock exchange Published duration 13 September 2019

media caption #AmINext protests in South Africa over violence against women

People campaigning over the high levels of violence against women in South Africa have taken their protest to the financial heart of the country.

Hundreds have gathered outside the Johannesburg Stock Exchange to call on the country's big firms to do more to tackle gender inequality.

Protests have been triggered by the rape and murder of 19-year-old Uyinene Mrwetyana in Cape Town last month.

Over 41,000 people were raped in South Africa in the year from April 2018.

That amounts to more than one rape every 15 minutes. Police statistics also show that eight women are murdered every day in the country.

'Women ask: Am I next?'

Nomsa Maseko, Johannesburg

image copyright EPA

Last week's news cycle was littered with stories of the rape and murder of women and children in several parts of the country.

It left many women asking: "Am I next?"

The rape and murder of Uyinene Mrwetyana was a moment that made women feel vulnerable and scared.

There was a sombre mood at the protest, which brought traffic to a standstill in Johannesburg's Sandton district.

Tears were rolling down the women's faces as they started singing "Senzeni na?", which loosely translated from Zulu means "what have we done to deserve this?"

The latest crime statistics released on Thursday revealed that women are justified to fear for their lives because murder, rape and sexual assaults have all increased.

But with the South African police overstretched and often accused of turning away victims who are desperate for help, it remains to be seen how the country plans to tackle this very real and disturbing problem.

Among the protesters' demands were that all companies listed on the stock exchange should set aside 2% of their profits to go towards tackling violence against women.

"We really are suffering [from] femicides and we need all hands on deck and business [in] South Africa is not exempt from that," Mandisa Khanyile, one of those organising the march, told the BBC's Newsday programme.

She said one of the things that needed funding was an education programme to get people to move away from the "toxic masculinity" that allows men to think that violence against women is acceptable.

A nurse, who was among the protesters, told the local eNCA news channel that she sees the victims of violence "each and every day... and we are saying 'we have had enough with the men doing this to our kids'".

"The government must stop all this," she added, "we want to go to work without the fear of being victimised."

image caption There is more than one rape every 15 minutes in South Africa, officials figures show

President Cyril Ramaphosa has been criticised for not doing enough to tackle the problem.

Last week, he was heckled at a rally outside parliament when he told protesters that violence against women was a national crisis. He pledged to review the laws on violence and sexual offences to make sure they were more effective.

In August Uyinene Mrwetyana, a student at the University of Cape Town, was raped and beaten to death. A man has been charged over the attack.