Why Would Anyone Film A Rape And Not Try To Stop It?

It's no longer an anomaly for people to witness a sexual assault and share images of it on social media.
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Raymond Gates, left, and Marina Lonina have been charged with rape, kidnapping and pandering sexually oriented materials involving a minor.
Illustration: Tyler Kingkade/The Huffington Post (Images via Getty, Franklin County)

It sounds unimaginable: someone witnesses a friend being sexually assaulted, but instead of seeking help, they film it and post it on social media.

But sadly, stories like this are more common than one would think. 

Prosecutors in Franklin County, Ohio claim that's what happened with Raymond Gates, 29, and Marina Lonina, 18, who were both charged last week with rape, kidnapping and pandering sexually oriented materials involving a minor. 

Gates, Lonina and the alleged victim met the day before the encounter and Gates bought the teens vodka, according to the prosecutor's office. Police said the three hung out the following day, Feb. 27 at a home in northeast Columbus. Prosecutors say that's where Gates pinned down the 17-year-old girl and raped her -- all while the victim allegedly cried "stop" and "it hurts" and Lonina filmed the incident on the live-streaming app Periscope.

Lonina is also accused of photographing "the victim in a state of nudity" the night before, according to the prosecutor. Both Gates and Lonina pled not guilty to all charges.

The only way Franklin County Prosecutor Ron O’Brien could explain the situation he was dealing with is to say that for Lonina, "She got caught up in the 'likes.'" 

Lonina's lawyer said the teen tried to help during the assault and put it on Periscope to preserve evidence, but O'Brien said for the most part she giggles through the 10-minute video.

As shocking as the picture painted by the prosecutor may be, this scenario has played out in several other high-profile cases in recent years.

"I've seen a startling increase in tech and social media being involved in rapes," said Carrie Goldberg, a Brooklyn lawyer who focuses on Internet harassment and sexual consent litigation.

"In these cases, where a rape gets plastered all over the Internet, there's the nonconsensual sexual assault, and the nonconsensual distribution," Goldberg told The Huffington Post. "And the worst thing that's ever happened in her life -- i.e., her rape -- comes up in infamy." 

“The worst thing that's ever happened in her life -- i.e., her rape -- comes up in infamy."”

- Carrie Goldberg, Brooklyn-based attorney

In Ohio, where the Periscope assault allegedly took place, there was international outrage in 2013 when students at Steubenville High School took photos of a sexual assault and then joked about it on video. Later that year, Ohio University freshman Vance Blanc witnessed a sexual encounter taking place in public and tweeted it at Hunter Moore, who ran a revenge porn site. The woman in the encounter later told police that it was actually a sexual assault, and police condemned witnesses for snapping photos instead of interrupting.

Goldberg said these types of cases are common for her.

"For most people that's novel; for me, that's another day at work," she said. 

A lawsuit filed Wednesday against Kansas State University described one female student who became heavily intoxicated at a fraternity party in April 2014 and was taken to a truck by a male student who was supposed to be a designated driver. The driver then allegedly raped the victim while 15 people looked on, taking photos and video. Those images circulated on social media in the following days, according to the complaint. 

When many people witness but fail to intervene in a crime, they are succumbing to what is called the "bystander effect," in which they either assume someone else will do something, or they stay quiet because that's what everyone else is doing. 

"People are literally looking side to side, trying to read the social norms of the room," said Sarah Nicksa, a criminal justice professor at Widener University. If a bystander sees everyone carrying on like everything's normal, they are less likely to intervene, Nicksa explained.

And it's worse with sexual assaults.

In one study conducted by Nicksa, collegiate-aged participants were least likely to intervene in sexual assault they witnessed, compared to a physical assault or a theft. Seventeen percent of people in another study had witnessed what they believed was a rape or sexual assault, but only one-sixth of the witnesses did anything about it, Nicksa found. 

A survey of over 150,000 students at 27 universities released last year showed that 54 percent of participants who witnessed someone acting in "a sexually violent or harassing manner" did nothing. This is why colleges are rolling out bystander intervention programs designed to change social norms, so that students do intervene.

But the bystander effect among young people is bumping up against competitive attitudes on social media, where some engage in a culture of one-upping their friends. This plays out on apps like Yeti and Snapchat with risqué and pornographic images.

"The thrill of documenting something that might elicit attention from one's peers and lead to a feeling of 'optimal distinctiveness' may also underlie motivations for posting sensational or unethical behaviors," Dara Greenwood, a psychology professor at Vassar College, told HuffPost. "Young adults in particular may be vulnerable to this kind of behavior because of the central role that peer approval plays in their life stage."

Last year, authorities charged three men in connection with an alleged gang rape in broad daylight in Panama City Beach, Florida. Hundreds of people were nearby, but no one intervened; instead, a bystander captured the incident on their cell phone. The sheriff's office said at the time that the video recorded one of the men involved saying "she isn't going to know" during the assault. 

One of the men charged was George Kennedy, a friend of the alleged victim who traveled with her from out of town to Panama City Beach for spring break. According to Kennedy's indictment, he held up her legs to help facilitate the assault and recorded it on his cell phone. Prosecutors dropped the charges against Kennedy in January, saying they could not prove the allegations beyond a reasonable doubt. Sexual battery charges are still pending in the case against the alleged assailants, Delonte Martistee and Ryan Calhoun, court records show. 

At the time of the spring break incident, the local sheriff called it one of the most "repulsive" things he'd seen, but fit a pattern with other cases they'd encountered. 

"This is not the first video we've recovered," Bay County Sheriff Frank McKeithen told reporters. "It's not the second video. It's not the third video. There's a number of videos we've recovered with things similar to this, and I can only imagine how many things we haven't recovered."

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Booking photos from the Bay County Sheriff's Office show Troy University students Delonte' Martistee, 22, left, and Ryan Austin Calhoun, 23.
ASSOCIATED PRESS

The bystander effect is particularly pronounced in teens and young adults, said Debra A. Pinals, a clinical professor of psychiatry at the University of Michigan. 

"Adolescents are much more susceptible to peer influences," she told HuffPost

Pinals explained that the thought process for teens and young adults is more focused on impulsive, short-term decisions. That means if an 18-year-old witnesses a crime, they're less likely do to anything if others do not seem alarmed.

"Generally, in adolescent and young adult thinking, some of that ability to pause, think and reflect is lessened," Pinals said.

At the extreme, teens like Rehtaeh Parsons and Audrie Pott have committed suicide after peers not only failed to intervene in their assaults, but then spread photos of the incidents, which is hard to stop.

Social media platforms have little incentive outside of moral obligation to stop these nonconsensual sexual images, since the Communications Decency Act largely protects them from legal ramifications for their users' behavior. In 9 states, civil revenge porn laws can be used to sue people who post sexual images taken without the subject's consent, according to Ari Ezra Waldman, a New York Law School professor. But winning a court case like that doesn't guarantee all websites will take the images down, he noted. 

Given how permanent these images can be, and the lack of resources for someone trying to remove photos of them, Waldman said, "we need to educate young people in schools about what it means to grow up in technology, and to use technology responsibility."

_______

Tyler Kingkade is a national reporter who covers higher education and sexual violence and is based in New York. You can reach him at tyler.kingkade@huffingtonpost.com, or find him on Twitter: @tylerkingkade.

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Photos Of Women Protesting Around The World
Turkey, 2013(01 of60)
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An anti government protester flashes a victory sign during the clashes between protesters and riot police on Taksim square in Istanbul on June 22, 2013. Turkish police used water cannon today to disperse thousands of demonstrators who had gathered anew in Istanbul's Taksim Square, calling for the resignation of Prime Minister Recep Tayyip Erdogan. (credit:OZAN KOSE/AFP/Getty Images)
France, 2015(02 of60)
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Policemen detain a topless Femen activist after she jumped in front of the car carrying former IMF chief Dominique Strauss-Kahn (not seen) upon his arrival for his trial in Lille, northern France, on February 10, 2015. Three topless women from the protest group Femen jumped on the car of Dominique Strauss-Kahn as the former IMF chief arrived to testify at his trial for "aggravated pimping." With slogans scrawled on their half-naked bodies and hurling insults at the car, the three protesters were quickly rounded up by police as the car entered an underground parking area. (credit:PHILIPPE HUGUEN/AFP/Getty Images)
Macedonia, 2015(03 of60)
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Migrants protest behind a fence against restrictions limiting passage at the Greek-Macedonian border, near Gevgelija, on December 1, 2015. Since last week, Macedonia has restricted passage to northern Europe to only Syrians, Iraqis and Afghans who are considered war refugees. All other nationalities are deemed economic migrants and told to turn back. Macedonia on November 29 finished building a fence on its frontier with Greece becoming the latest country in Europe to build a border barrier aimed at checking the flow of migrants. (credit:ARMEND NIMANI/AFP/Getty Images)
India, 2007(04 of60)
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Kashmiri women shout anti-Indian slogans during a protest demonstration against the arrest of a girl by paramilitary soldiers during a raid in Maloora, in the outskirts of Srinagar, India, Thursday, Aug. 9, 2007. Paramilitary soldiers fired tear gas to disperse hundreds of angry protesters demonstrating against the arrest. (credit:Rafiq Maqbool/AP)
United States, 2014(05 of60)
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A woman listens to a rally with her mouth taped shut during the "Justice For All" march December 13, 2014 in Washington, DC. Thousands of people descended on Washington to demand justice Saturday for black men who have died at the hands of white police, the latest in weeks of demonstrations across the United States. (credit:BRENDAN SMIALOWSKI/AFP/Getty Images)
France, 2015(06 of60)
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Topless Femen activists perform the Nazi salute near flags reading "Heil Le Pen" as they demonstrate on a balcony against France's far-right Front National (FN) political party during an FN rally in honour of Jeanne d'Arc (Joan of Arc) taking place just below in Paris on May 1, 2015. (credit:THOMAS SAMSON/AFP/Getty Images)
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Supporters of ousted Honduran President Manuel Zelaya march in protest against the military coup, in Tegucigalpa on July 2, 2009. Coup leaders in Honduras vowed that ousted President Manuel Zelaya will "never return to power" despite mounting international pressure and an ultimatum by the Organization of American States. (credit:Jose CABEZAS/AFP/Getty Images)
South Korea, 2015(08 of60)
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A woman sits in front of riot police blocking the road to protect protesters during the anti-government protest on April 24, 2015 in Seoul, South Korea. Korean Confederation of Trade Unions (KCTU) went on a general strike in protest against the South Korean government's policy, including reformation of the labor market and public pension system. The rally was also joined by other civic groups in Seoul and families of Sewol accident victims. (credit:Chung Sung-Jun/Getty Images)
India, 2013(09 of60)
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United Kingdom, early 2000s(10 of60)
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Two punk girls, cheering, Reclaim the Streets, demo, UK 2000s. (credit:PYMCA/UIG/Getty Images)
China, 2009(11 of60)
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Ethnic Uygur women grab a riot policemen as they protest in Urumqi in China's far west Xinjiang province on July 7, 2009. Police fired clouds of acrid tear gas to disperse thousands of Han Chinese protesters armed with makeshift weapons, as chaos gripped this flashpoint city riven by ethnic tensions. Thousands of heavily armed police deployed across Urumqi, the capital of China's remote northwest Xinjiang region, but tensions spiked dramatically following weekend rioting that claimed at least 156 lives. (credit:PETER PARKS/AFP/Getty Images)
United Kingdom, 2012(12 of60)
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Women bearing provocative words on their bodies take part in a "slut walk" in London on September 22, 2012 to protest against the police and courts' denial of justice for rape victims. (credit:JUSTIN TALLIS/AFP/GettyImages)
United States, 2015(13 of60)
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Protesters including Sherry Weston of Denver, Colorado demonstrate outside of Bill Cosby's comedy show on January 17, 2015 at the Buell Theater in Denver, Colorado. Cosby has been facing allegations by numerous women who claim the comedian drugged and sexually assaulted them. (credit:Marc Piscotty/Getty Images)
Pakistan, 2010(14 of60)
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Pakistani protesters from Lyari, an impoverished neighbourhood of the city, shout anti-government slogans to protest against an operation led by security agencies in their areas in Karachi on January 11, 2010. Thousands of people poured into the streets of Pakistan's financial capital Karachi on January 11 to protest security crackdowns following the deaths of dozens of people in a wave of political violence. Security officials say up to 48 political party workers have been killed in Karachi beginning January 7, when the headless body of a worker from the city's main political party, the Muttahida Qaumi Movement (MQM), was discovered. (credit:ASIF HASSAN/AFP/Getty Images)
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A police officer aims a machine gun at a woman as people protest beside a body killed during a shootout involving police and suspected drug traffickers at the Complexo de Alemao slum in Rio de Janeiro, Tuesday, Feb. 13, 2007. The violence comes just before the city's Carnival celebrations next Feb 18 and Feb 19. Rio is one of the most violent cities in the world with an annual homicide rate of about 50 per 100,000. (credit:Ricardo Moraes/AP)
Brazil, 1992(16 of60)
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Women call for the impeachment of Brazilian President Fernando Collor de Mello during an anti-Collor student demonstration in the suburb of Taquatinga, Brazil 20 km from Brasilia 25 August. A congressional report released 24 August 1992 charged Collor with widespread corruption. (credit:ANTONIO SCORZA/AFP/Getty Images)
India, 2015(17 of60)
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Kashmiri Muslim women shout anti Indian and pro Kashmir freedom slogans as they mourn during the funeral of Bilal Ahmad Bhat, 23, a civilian who was allegedly shot dead by Indian paramilitary Border Security Force (BSF) on August 12, 2015 in Larkipur, 35 km (21 miles) south of Srinagar, the summer capital of Indian administered Kashmir, India. Hundreds of Kashmiris participated in the funeral of Bhat who was killed by the Indian paramilitary BSF after they allegedly opened fire on the protestors who were protesting against the killing of two Lashkar-e-Taiba (Army of the Righteous), one of the largest and most active militant organization operating in Indian administered Kashmir, militants in an gun battle in Rakh-e-Lajura village of south Kashmir district on 11 August 2015. (credit:Yawar Nazir/ Getty Images)
Spain, 2009(18 of60)
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Women display placards during a demonstration to mark the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women in Madrid on November 25, 2009. (credit:DOMINIQUE FAGET/AFP/Getty Images)
Democratic Republic of Congo, 2006(19 of60)
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A policeman kicks a woman during a demonstration with a group of the main opposition Union for Democracy and Social Progress (UDPS) demonstrators, 30 June 2006, in Kinshasa. A major dialogue involving the political elite of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) from the president down was set to open Friday to ensure a smooth run-up to the country's first democratic elections in 45 years. (credit: LIONEL HEALING/AFP/Getty Images)
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Afghan demonstrators shout slogans during a rally in front of the Supreme Court in Kabul on March 24, 2015, held to protest the killing of Afghan resident Farkhunda. More than a thousand people protested in the Afghan capital to call for justice after a woman was brutally killed by a mob who falsely accused her of burning a copy of the Koran. The woman, 27 year-old Farkhunda, was beaten with sticks and stones and thrown from a roof before being run over by a car outside a mosque in Kabul on March 19. The mob then set her body ablaze and dumped it in Kabul river, while police allegedly looked on. (credit:WAKIL KOHSAR/AFP/Getty Images)
Democratic Republic of Congo, 2012(21 of60)
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Female members of associations against violence towards women in the east of the Democratic Republic of Congo hold up leaflets to protest against ongoing violence during the opening of the Francophonie summit in Kinshasa on October 13, 2012. France's President Francois Hollande stressed human rights and the need to end the conflict in eastern Democratic Republic of Congo as leaders of French-speaking nations met for a summit today. (credit:ISSOUF SANOGO/AFP/GettyImages)
France, 2016(22 of60)
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A Femen activist, Sarah Constantin, is hanged from a noose-like rope from a Paris bridge to call attention to the large number of executions in Iran as she stages a protest against visiting Iranian President Hassan Rouhani in Paris, Thursday, Jan. 28, 2016. A near-naked woman hanging from a noose-like rope from a Paris bridge has sent a message to visiting Iranian President Hassan Rouhani. (credit:Zacharie Scheurer/AP)
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Women pray as they face off against soldiers in an unauthorized protest calling for Laurent Gbagbo to step down, in the Treichville neighborhood of Abidjan, Ivory Coast, Monday, Feb. 28, 2011. Within minutes of the end of prayers, soldiers began firing to disperse the protestors. In a dramatic escalation of the nation's conflict, Belarus has violated an international arms embargo by sending three attack helicopters to military forces supporting Ivory Coast's longtime ruler who refuses to cede power, alleged a Sunday statement issued by the office of United Nations Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. (credit:Rebecca Blackwell/AP)
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Women protest at the National Organization for Women Pro-Choice rally June 15, 1991 in New York City. In 1967 NOW became the first national organization to call for the legalization of abortion and for the repeal of all anti-abortion laws and has been fighting for full reproductive rights for all women, including poor women and young women. (credit:Porter Gifford/Liaison/Getty Images)
Mexico, 2005(25 of60)
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Naked women, from the "400 People Movement", protest at the entrance of the Presidential residence of Los Pinos in Mexico City, against the expropriation of their lands by federal deputies,16 May 2005. (credit:JUAN BARRETO/AFP/Getty Images)
United States, 2000(26 of60)
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A Woman Demonstrating On Behalf Of Elian Gonzalez Remaining In The United States Is Hoisted Into The Air April 13, 2000 By Fellow Supporters Of Elian, Outside The Little Havana, Miami Home Where Gonzalez Is Staying. (credit:Miami Herald/Getty Images)
India, 2010(27 of60)
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Kashmiri women shout anti Indian slogans during the funeral of Mehraj-u-Din Lone after he was killed by Indian police during a demonstration on August 3, 2010 in Srinagar the summer capital of Indian administered Kashmir, India. Four people were killed on Tuesday when government troops fired bullets and tear gas into thousands of anti-India protesters during a demonstration by Kashmiris against the Indian rule in Kashmir. (credit:Yawar Nazir/Getty Images)
India, 2010(28 of60)
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Semi-nude Indian Devadasi women shout anti-government slogans during a protest in Mumbai on August 15, 2010. The protest was to demand Indian Rupees 2000 (about USD 43) per month as a pension for life after their retirement. Devadasi is a Hindu religious practice in which girls are married and dedicated to a deity or temple. (credit:Nagesh Ohal/India Today Group/Getty Images)
Thailand, 2008(29 of60)
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Student supporters of the People's Alliance for Democracy (PAD) marching through the streets of Bangkok towards Democracy Monument. The PAD, which opposes Thailand's elected government under Prime Minister Samak Sundaravej, has sought to widen its appeal to younger sections of the population. The movement originally sprang up in opposition to former Prime Minister Thaksin Shinawatra who was finally ousted by a military coup in September 2006. PAD activists, thousands of whom are occupying government house, argue that the government of Mr. Samak is a front for Thaksin and represents a corrupt political tradition that must be removed. Violent clashes between PAD and pro-government supporters resulting in a death prompted the government to declare a state of emergence in the Thai capital Bangkok. (credit:Yvan Cohen/LightRocket/Getty Images)
Australia, 2015(30 of60)
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A woman is removed by police from the Martin Place stage after storming the area to speak out against 'Reclaim Australia' protesters on April 4, 2015 in Sydney, Australia. 'Reclaim Australia' grassroots rallies are being held across Australia to protest the alleged 'Islamisation' of Australia. (credit:Lisa Maree Williams/Getty Images)
Bolivia, 2015(31 of60)
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Members of the Mujeres Creando (Women Creating) activist women group dressed as nuns who were protesting against the upcoming visit of Pope Francis to Bolivia, are taken away by police in front of the Metropolitan Cathedral in La Paz, on July 6, 2015. Pope Francis, in South America on a three-nation tour, will perform mass in Ecuador Monday, with more than a million faithful -- many of whom camped out overnight -- expected to attend. (credit:JORGE BERNAL/AFP/Getty Images)
Ivory Coast, 2008(32 of60)
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Women protest against growing cost of daily living conditions on March 31, 2008 in Yopougon, neighborhood of Abidjan. Police used tear gas to disperse the several hundred people, mainly women, protesting. (credit:ISSOUF SANOGO/AFP/Getty Images)
Venezuela, 2015(33 of60)
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The wife of jailed Venezuelan opposition leader Leopoldo Lopez, Lilian Tintori (C) and relatives of political prisoners pose inside a mock prison cell during a protest in Caracas on December 14, 2015. The Venezuelan opposition defined this Friday The Roadmap will continue absolute control of the future Parliament , focused on the release of their imprisoned leaders and economic reform , but President Nicolas Maduro rejected them in advance to rule out a reconciliation . (credit:JUAN BARRETO/AFP/Getty Images)
India, 1996(34 of60)
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Muslim women in purdah opposed to the state's upcoming assembly elections flee teargas during a demonstration 03 September 1996 in Srinagar. (credit:TAUSEEF MUSTAFA/AFP/Getty Images)
Argentina, 2002(35 of60)
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A woman shouts slogans during a nationwide protest against government-imposed restrictions on access to bank accounts and to demand that Supreme Court justices step down, 25 January 2002, in Buenos Aires. Protests continue regularly since the country defaulted on its international debt last month and Argentine President Eduardo Duhalde froze some 65 billion USD in savings accounts to prevent a run on banks that could worsen the country's dire financial straits. (credit:FABIAN GREDILLAS/AFP/Getty Images)
India, 2008(36 of60)
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Indian policemen restrain a Tibetan woman during a demonstration at the Chinese Embassy in New Delhi on March 12, 2008 on the occasion of the Tibetan Women's Uprising Day. Some 49 Tibetan women, holding Tibetan flags attempted to enter the Chinese embassy premises in a protest marking Tibetan Women's Uprising Day. (credit:RAVEENDRAN/AFP/Getty Images)
France, 1993(37 of60)
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A group protesters with painted faces at an anti-fascist demonstration in Paris, France, February 1993. (credit:Steve Eason/Hulton Archive/Getty Images)
Belarus, 2015(38 of60)
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Ecuador, 2010(39 of60)
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An Afro-Ecuadorean woman argues with police guarding a fence in front of the National Assembly in Quito on May 5, 2010 in protest of a proposed water privatization law that could impact the country's indigenous population. The protesters argued that the law would allow mining and electric generating firms to divert water that is otherwise available to the indigenous groups. They are seeking a special counsel to govern water rights. (credit:PABLO COZZAGLIO/AFP/Getty Images)
India, 2010(40 of60)
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Kashmiri women shout pro-freedom slogans during a protest in Srinagar on July 16, 2010. Indian security forces reimposed a strict curfew in Kashmir's main city July 16 after a decision to ease restrictions for the first time in five days led to huge street protests. The clampdown was briefly lifted on July 15 and thousands took to the streets of Kashmir's summer capital Srinagar to denounce the Indian security forces, who are accused of killing Kashmiris during recent protests against Indian rule. (credit:ROUF BHAT/AFP/Getty Images)
China, 2009(41 of60)
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Chinese riot police watch a Muslim ethnic Uighur woman protest in Urumqi in China's far west Xinjiang province on July 7, 2009 following a third day of unrest. Police fired tear gas to disperse thousands of Han Chinese protesters armed with makeshift weapons and vowing revenge, as chaos gripped this flash-point city riven by ethnic tensions following rioting that claimed at least 156 lives. Authorities ordered a night curfew and thousands of heavily armed police deployed across Urumqi. (credit:PETER PARKS/AFP/Getty Images)
Turkey, 2011(42 of60)
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Kurdish women hold portraits of their missing sons and daughters on May 18, 2011 during a demonstration in Istanbul against the recent killing of 12 Kurdish rebels by security forces. Turkish troops killed 12 Kurdish rebels in fighting in the southeast of the country and lost one of their own soldiers to a mine explosion. The clashes began on May 12 when fighters of the Kurdistan Workers Party (PKK) tried to cross into Turkey's Sirnak province near Uludere from bases in Iraq, security sources said. A second attempt was made on May 13, the sources said, adding that 12 rebels in total had been killed, four surrendered and numerous weapons seized. (credit:MUSTAFA OZER/AFP/Getty Images)
Poland, 2011(43 of60)
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Polish women take part in a Breastfeeding Is Not Obscene protest in Warsaw's subway on June 15, 2011 in reaction to a ban imposed by city officials on an art project, portraying breastfeeding mothers. The project was supposed to have been displayed in the subway. (credit:JANEK SKARZYNSKI/AFP/Getty Images)
West Bank, 2004(44 of60)
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A Muslim school girl holds a portrait of Palestinian leader Yasser Arafat and a national flag as she joins other women among hundreds of demonstrators protesting the construction of the controversial Israeli "security fence" which goes over their land in the West Bank village of Budrus, some 15 kms west of Ramallah 01 January 2004. Clashes erupted after foreigners and Palestinians protested next to the construction site. (credit:JAMAL ARURI/AFP/Getty Images)
India, 2011(45 of60)
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Indian policemen and activists from the Krishak Mukti Sangram Samiti (KMSS) clash during a demonstration in Guwahati on June 22, 2011, held to protest against the government’s drive to evict settlers on government land, in Guwahati on June 22, 2011. According to media reports, three people were killed and several injured in the clash between the police and members of KMSS. (credit:STRDEL/AFP/Getty Images)
Cuba, 2012(46 of60)
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Activists of the Ladies in White opposition group protest against the Cuban government, on February 23, 2012 in Havana. The group commemorate the 2nd Anniversary of Cuban political prisoner Orlando Zapata's death in jail. (credit:ADALBERTO ROQUE/AFP/Getty Images)
Turkey, 2012(47 of60)
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Turkish women chant slogans during a protest on the International Women's Day in Ankara on, March 8, 2012. (credit:ADEM ALTAN/AFP/Getty Images)
India, 2012(48 of60)
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A woman joins others in voicing her opposition to Chinese government intervention in Tibet during a protest in New Delhi on May 23, 2012. The protest was called to mark and oppose the 61st anniversary of the '17-Point Agreement' between Tibet and China which the protesters say was signed by the Chinese government and the Tibetan government under duress on 23 May 1951. The 14th Dalai Lama has repudiated the agreement on many occasions. (credit:SAJJAD HUSSAIN/AFP/GettyImages)
Turkey, 2012(49 of60)
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Women hold signs as they take part in a demonstration against government plans to ban or limit the practice of abortion in Turkey, on June 17, 2012, in Ankara. Some of the signs read "Illegal abortion kills, not legal abortion". A majority of Turks oppose a ban on abortion as the Islamist-rooted government moves to try and limit the practice, according to a survey published on June 11. A total of 55.5 percent said they opposed a ban, while the remaining 44.5 percent were for it, according to the Konsensus research centre poll conducted among 1,500 people between May 24 and June 6, Haberturk daily reported. (credit: ADEM ALTAN/AFP/GettyImages)
Spain, 2012(50 of60)
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A bare breast protester holds a placard reading "Love unites us, we are all equal, we were born free and we will die free" during a demonstration organized by Spain's "indignant" protesters, a popular movement against a political system that they say deprives ordinary Spaniards of a voice in the crisis, near the parliament building in Madrid on September 29, 2012. Helmeted riot police fired rubber bullets and baton-charged protesters on September 25, 2012 as thousands rallied near parliament in anger at the economic crisis, in clashes that left at least 14 people wounded. (credit:DANI POZO/AFP/GettyImages)
Spain, 2016(51 of60)
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Women protesting against gender-based violence during a demonstration on Valentines Day in Madrid, Spain on Feb. 14, 2016. (credit:Marcos del Mazo/Pacific Press/LightRocket via Getty Images)
United Kingdom, 2012(52 of60)
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Campaigners, some dressed as suffragettes, attend a rally organized by UK Feminista to call for equal rights for men and women on October 24, 2012 in London, England. Hundreds of women from around the UK congregated in Westminster to attend a rally and lobby their local MPs to demonstrate against any legislation that damages women's rights. (credit:Oli Scarff/Getty Images)
Algeria, 1998(53 of60)
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A woman gestures to riot policemen during a protest organized by the Rally for Culture and Democracy (RCD) in Algiers 02 July against a new law making Arabic the sole official language in Algeria amid continued tension over the murder of Berber singer Lounes Matoub. Around 1,000 people took part in the rally during which three policemen and one protester were injured when riot police prevented the marchers to advance on the residence of President Liamine Zeroual. (credit:AFP/Getty Image)
Serbia, 2005(54 of60)
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A member of the "Women in Black", an international peace network, lays on the ground wrapped in a plastic bag, as a sign of protest in downtown Novi Sad, some 80 kilometers (50 miles) northwest of Belgrade, Serbia and Montenegro, Saturday, Dec. 10, 2005. The movement marked Dec. 10, International Human Rights Day, with a performance, stressing issues such as rights of minorities in Serbia's northern province of Vojvodina. (credit:Marko Drobnjakovic/AP)
Philippines, 2008(55 of60)
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Women workers of Triumph International, the largest undergarment manufacturer in the Philippines, toss bras and panties in the air during an "underwear protest" Wednesday Oct.15, 2008 at the company's sales warehouse at Manila's financial district of Makati. The hundreds of protesters walked out of their factory following a deadlock in the negotiation for better wages and other benefits. (credit:Bullit Marquez/AP)
India, 2009(56 of60)
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Members of "gulabi gang," (pink gang), a women's vigilante group, shout slogans at a protest in New Delhi, India, Thursday, Sept. 17, 2009 as they demand a separate Bundelkhand state. The group so named after the pink dress that they wear was formed in Uttar Pradesh State's Banda district. The women brandish sticks and fight for social issues. (credit:Mustafa Quraishi/AP)
Belgium, 2015(57 of60)
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A woman throws eggs at riot police during a farmers demonstration in Brussels on Monday, Sept. 7, 2015. European dairy farmers demonstrated in Brussels on Monday to protest against what they believe are unfair prices on their dairy products. (credit:Virginia Mayo/AP)
Turkey, 2016(58 of60)
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Turkish members of the "One Billion Rising" movement, dance during a demonstration to denounce violence and injustices against women, on Valentine's Day in Ankara, on February 14, 2016. (credit:ADEM ALTAN/AFP/Getty Image)
Nigeria, 2016(59 of60)
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A woman holds a placard reading "Hike in tariff is capitalist fraud" during a demonstration to protest against the 45 percent raise of electricity prices on February 8, 2016 in Lagos. Labour unions under the umbrella of Nigeria Labour Congress (NLC) and Trade Union Congress (TUC) in collaboration with civil society groups and students organized a protest rally to reject the recent increase in electricity tariffs, which became effective on Feb. 1, 2016. (credit:PIUS UTOMI EKPEI/AFP/Getty Images)
Peru, 2016(60 of60)
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Peruvian andean women, victims of forced sterilizations during the administration of Peru's former President Alberto Fujimori, attend a protest in Lima, capital of Peru, on February 10, 2016. During the government of Alberto Fujimori, forced sterilizations were performed on thousands of women as part of the mid-1990s program of former president Alberto Fujimori who argued that a lower birth rate was crucial to eliminating poverty in Peru. (credit:Sebastian Casta/Anadolu Agency/Getty Images)