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Australia's government has scrapped two sex education videos designed to teach teenagers about consent and sexual assault after they were widely panned.
The online education campaign used metaphors such as smearing milkshake on someone's face in order to depict disrespect and abuse.
Equality activists described the videos as "bizarre" and "concerning".
Officials removed the milkshake video and another on coercion in which a girl wonders whether to swim with sharks.
The federal government had originally defended the campaign, which it said was created with the help of experts.
The decision to pull the videos followed criticism from senior figures in both the governing Liberal and opposition Labor parties, as well as numerous activists and campaigners.
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New South Wales Education Minister Sarah Mitchell, a Liberal politician, called the videos "woeful" and a "missed opportunity".
"I think we should be much more up front with young people when we talk about these issues."
One video, designed for students aged between 14 and 17, shows a teenage girl smearing milkshake on her boyfriend's face without his permission. The video then uses other examples of eating pizza and "touching your butt" as situations where permission would be required.
Another video about respecting other people's decisions and choices shows a teenage girl doubting whether she wants to swim with sharks, while a boy tries to convince her to do so.
A section entitled "sex and gender norms" confuses "norms" and "myths", for example, by suggesting that ideas such as "males enjoy sex more than females" and "females that wear short skirts want sex" are examples of gender norms.
The Good Society's website describes the learning material as an "engaging, flexible, online program that helps students develop safe, healthy and respectful relationships".
But women's rights activists and anti-rape campaigners say the content is harmful, avoids using the words sex, rape or assault and does not reflect realistic situations or relationships.
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Gender equality organisation Fair Agenda has launched a petition calling on the Australian government to work with violence prevention experts to replace the "concerning and bizarre" content.
"Young people deserve consent and respectful relationships training that practically and explicitly helps them understand how to ethically navigate relationships," it said.
Fair Agenda also said the website failed to meet Australia's national standards for the prevention of sexual assault through education. It uses the website's "further information" page as an example, which tells students they can report "any sexual violation" to the Australian Human Rights Commission, but does not recommend telling a trusted adult or the police.
Sharna Bremner, the director of the Australian organisation End Rape on Campus, tweeted: "There is some good information on the site. But there's also some really harmful stuff, which outweighs any of the good."
Australian of the Year and sexual assault survivor Grace Tame said the videos were insulting the intelligence of adults and children alike.
"It minimises the experience of rape trauma, it fails to really address the nuances of this complex issue of consent," she told The Drum programme on ABC TV.
The material has also been criticised for being out of touch with modern teenagers, by using references to the Hollywood movie Titanic, which was released 24 years ago, and The X-Files TV series, which finished its final season nearly 20 years ago.
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In a statement on 14 April, Australia's education department said the programme had been developed in "conjunction with Our Watch, the eSafety Commissioner and the Foundation for Young Australians (FYA), as well as parent, community and principals' groups".
However, Our Watch and the FYA have said that they were barely consulted. FYA told SBS News it had introduced the government to a young person in its network who may have taken part in a confidential reference group in late 2017.
Our Watch, which works to prevent violence against women and children, said in a statement that it "was consulted between late 2017 and early 2019 when the materials were being developed and provided advice. We have not been asked to use or endorse the materials subsequently".
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A video of a teenager appearing to be tortured and "apologising" for criticising the Chechen government on social media has emerged online.
In the video, which has been condemned by activists, the man is forced to perform a humiliating act.
He identifies himself as the 19-year-old administrator of a social media channel that has criticised Chechnya's leader Ramzan Kadyrov.
Mr Kadyrov is accused of overseeing rights abuses in the Russian republic.
The ally of Russia's President Vladimir Putin denies that his government detains and tortures critics who speak out publicly against the regime.
But human rights groups say victims are punished and tortured until they post "apologies" online.
Warning: Distressing scenes are described below
Chechnya is an autonomous region of Russia firmly under the control of Mr Kadyrov, who was appointed by Mr Putin in 2007 after separatists fought unsuccessfully for independence for a decade.
He is in significant distress, says he wants to punish himself and then performs a humiliating act with a bottle.
He says his name is Salman Tepsurkayev.
1ADAT, which is run by Chechen nationals in Russia and elsewhere in Europe, confirmed that Mr Tepsurkayev had been involved with their channel but said he had only been a moderator.
Posts in the group criticise Mr Kadyrov's authoritarian government as well as Mr Putin.
Mr Tepsurkayev was detained earlier this month for his online activity, members of 1ADAT told Russian pro-opposition website MBK Media.
The video has been met with a wave of indignation after it was shared widely in Russia.
Ekaterina Sokirianskaya, director of The Conflict Analysis and Prevention Center, has been bombarded with messages from Chechens, she told the Daily Beast.
"Chechen women and men said they felt sick, shocked, humiliated; many did not know how to continue their life with dignity," she said.
The Chechen government office of human rights told the Kavkaz.Realii website that the incident in the video was "unacceptable" but that they were not investigating because the man filmed had not come forward with a complaint.
In November 2019 Mr Kadyrov vowed to crackdown on repression, saying "those who are violating harmony between people, those who gossip and cause rows, if we don't stop them by killing them, imprisoning them, or intimidating them, nothing will work".
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