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Rape or sexual assault: what do I do now?
If you or someone you know, believe that you've been sexually assaulted, raped or harassed, it's hard to know…
A “very anxious” university student who touched a girl on the waist as he tried to talk to her was ordered to pay her £250 ($A470) compensation this week.
Jamie Griffiths, 19, googled ‘’how to make a friend’’ before making contact with the fellow pupil during two attempts to engage her in conversations as she walked to and from school.
The victim, then 17, who was due to sit her mock exams, burst into tears during the second encounter and went to police with her mother, saying Griffiths would have touched her breast had she not moved away.
She later described how her school work had suffered and how she was unable to sit her mock exams.
The teenager also said the unwanted touching had hindered her application process to Oxford University.
In a statement to police, she said: ‘’I felt extremely anxious in the following weeks often breaking down into tears. I was completely unable to walk anywhere by myself without being overcome by fear.
“I had mock exams and the stress and anxiety meant that I was unable to focus or revise as I was continuously crying and feeling unsafe even in my own home.
“I was scared to walk by myself with my parents having to pick me up and drop me off. It wasn’t until late November that I felt confident.
“Even to this day, six months later, I feel anxious and worried whenever I have to go there. Every time I go to the place the first incident took place my heart stops and I mentally prepare myself to see him there.
“All of this happening when I’m in my final year at school, I’m afraid it will have affected my grades and potentially my future.’’
At Manchester Magistrates’ Court, Griffiths who lives with his parents in a £650,000 ($A1.2 million) house in the affluent town of Knutsford, Cheshire, faced jail after he was convicted of two charges of sexual assault.
But he was ordered to complete a 12-months community order with 200 hours unpaid work and was told he must sign the Sex Offender Register for the next five years.
The first year criminology student, who is now studying at Durham University, denied the charges, claiming he was a “shy, anxious and awkward” teenager.
He said he had clumsily approached the girl in an attempt “to make a friend but the words didn’t come out”.
The incidents occurred between October and November last year while the pair were studying A levels at a secondary school in Knutsford.
Jamie Griffiths, 19, has been ordered to pay a £250 ($A470) fine after touching a girl on the waist during an awkward encounter last year. Picture: Cavendish PressSource:Cavendish Press
Now aged 18, the girl said she had been walking home from an English lesson when she encountered Griffiths on a railway bridge.
He touched her on the arm as she tried to avoid him and he walked away.
However, she said she encountered Griffiths again at lunchtime as she was on her way to school to sit a timed English essay.
The girl told the court: ‘’The pavement was quite wide but he suddenly moved to walk in front of me, looked me straight in the eye and touches me on my side and walked off.
“It was quite a while — three to five seconds.
“He smirked at me. He didn’t stop, he just touched me and walked off and I broke down crying in the street — it was quite traumatic.
“I had reported the previous incident to the police two days beforehand as it had been going around that other incidents had occurred, and I thought I could give more evidence and then it happened again.
“It came up on a local Facebook group chat.
“I broke down in tears straight away and rang my mum. She picked me up, we went straight to the house and then went straight to the police station and reported the incident.”
Griffiths was further ordered to pay costs of £735 ($A1300) plus a further £78 ($A146) for damaging a teacher’s chair during an unrelated incident.
He is banned from contacting the victim for 12 months under the terms of a restraining order.
Defence lawyer Claire Aldridge said her client had been going through a “difficult time’’ when he was forced to re-sit a year at high school due to him having to drop physics and maths A Levels.
She said: “He feels lessons have been learned. In fact, this whole case had been a huge learning curve. He deeply regrets reaching out to touch the complainant and he apologises for any stress caused to her.
“He tells me he realises how sensitive issues are relating to physical contact and how one’s actions can be considered.”
She added: “He also received counselling from a GP referral in relation to anxiety and depression.
“He has started at Durham University. He is reading criminology.”
This article originally appeared on The Sun and was reproduced with permission
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A Leading feminist publishing house is at odds with the editors of several magazines for teenage girls over their coverage of sex and relationships.
The Women's Press, which publishes fiction, biographies and handbooks, invited the magazines to publish extracts of a novel, In the Deep End, which attempts to deal responsibly with issues such as first-time sexual encounters. But the publishing house says it has fallen foul of the magazines' nervousness since they were criticised by MPs for the way in which they approached such sensitive subjects.
Last year teen magazines were attacked by MP Peter Luff for their "squalid titillation, salaciousness and smut", and he introduced a Bill to force them to carry age warnings on sexually explicit material.
The author of In the Deep End, Kate Cann, and the Women's Press were amazed at the attitude of the magazines to the novel. Emma D'Almeida of the Women's Press said she sent proofs to Bliss, Sugar and Just Seventeen three months ago. "We met with real reluctance. They wouldn't touch them. They have had such problems in the past with sex that they couldn't manage the book."
Last December the first report from the Teenage Magazine Arbitration Panel censured Sugar and Bliss for printing unrepresentative figures in surveys which suggested, falsely, that the vast majority of readers were sexually active.
Ms Cann and the Women's Press believe that this criticism and the views expressed in Parliament have made the magazines unwilling to take risks. "They are frightened by the recent outcry," she said.
In her novel, 16-year-old Coll tries to decide whether she should sleep with her boyfriend, Art. The book charts her slow decision to sleep with him, and the ramifications that follow. "I was caught up in a momentum. I knew sex was the next stage. That was the connection I wanted with him now... I was still worried about actually going through with it though.
"Going all the way. It felt like such a long way. You can find out everything in theory but the physical act is still very - well, physical."
Ms Cann believes that her book has a responsible tone, with its emphasis both on safe sex and the emotional side of a sexual relationship. Of the magazines' response she said: "I think they are scared by the honesty and it is such a shame.
"We are living in such a sexualised society - sado-masochism seems to have entered popular culture but we still don't tell kids about the emotional implications of their first love affair.
"Teenage magazines have very strong sexual content, all this titillation, how to get boys, how to be sexy. Sex education gives you the general basis. We felt there was a gap between the two.
"I remember longing for a book when I was growing up that would talk honestly and there was nothing around. They want to know what it feels like, does it hurt, all things like that."
Before the criticisms of teen magazines, Diving In, the book to which In the Deep End is a sequel, was cover-wrapped to Bliss, resulting in half a million being given away. Teenagers wrote to the Women's Press in droves demanding to know when the sequel would be out. Diving In itself had been censored because the publishers were afraid about the impact on schools sales but with the positive response they got they decided to be "a bit braver", says Ms Cann.
She wrote the book because she felt that nothing that dealt honestly with sexual relationships between teenagers had been written since Judy Blume's Forever, 20 years ago. While Forever was a ground-breaker, it deals more with issues such as going on the Pill while Ms Cann, writing in the Aids age, wanted to make the idea of using a condom a priority.
Marina Gask, editor of Sugar, said her magazine's fear of being criticised because of the book's sexual content "has undoubtedly something to do with it. But I can't speak for all the teenage press."
Maria Coole, deputy editor of Bliss, denied the magazine would "shy away from a book just because it had teenagers having sex in it".
Sarah Pyper, features editor of Just Seventeen, refused to comment.

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