Contestants broke with tradition and turned the Miss Peru pageant into a protest highlighting violence against women in one of South America’s most dangerous countries for women.
In elegant ball gowns, the 23 finalists in Sunday’s televised pageant at the Lima Municipal Theater gave voice to thousands of women who are victims of harassment, sexual and physical abuse, and murder.
Instead of giving their bust, waist and hip size, the contestants took turns reciting a litany of shocking facts about violence against women in Peru.
Photo: AFP / LATINA TELEVISION
“My name is Camila Canicoba, I represent Lima and my measurements are: 2,202 cases of feminicides reported in the last nine years in my country,” one said.
“Eighty-one percent of people who attack young girls are close to the family,” another said.
“One girl dies every 10 minutes due to sexual exploitation,” another said.
“More than 70 percent of the women in Peru are victims of street harassment,” yet another added.
Each sharply delivered phrase shook the audience, which had been expecting traditional light entertainment.
“I think that the fact that you are looking at your regional representative, at the queen of your department, giving open and real figures about what happens in our country is alarming,” contest organizer Jessica Newton told reporters.
“Unfortunately, there are many women who do not know and think they are isolated cases,” said Newton, Miss Peru 1987.
So far this year, 82 women have been murdered and 156 cases of attempted murder have been registered against women in Peru, finalist Karen Cueto said from the stage.
The figures highlight Peru’s ranking as second only to Bolivia as the country with the worst record of violence against women in South America, according to the Organization of American States’ Observatory of Citizen Security.
The pageant contestants themselves were no exception — of the 150 who began the contest, five have been the victims of violence, including rape, Newton said.
Violence against women became a front-page issue in Peru after the rape of a volunteer for the national census program.
Two TV journalists then publicly declared they had been victims of violence by their partners, and there have been endless news stories about women being beaten or stabbed, and minors raped.
The stream of news has sparked calls in Peru for the death penalty for rapists.
The normally trite question-and-answer session with the event’s host was dramatically different, too. Instead of being asked about favorite hobbies or charities, the women were prompted for their responses on what to do about violence.
One question asked was: “Every day we see in the news that more women die at the hands of their partners or their ex-partners. If you had the opportunity to change the laws, what would be the right one for the crime of feminicide?”
Andrea Moberg, representing Peru’s eastern department of Loreto, answered that rapists should be punished with life imprisonment.
Romina Lozano, representing Callao, said her plan would be to “implement a database containing the name of each aggressor, not only for feminicide, but for every kind of violence against women. In this way we can protect ourselves.”
In the end, the judges elected Lozano this year’s Miss Peru.
She is to walk with the other contestants at the head of a march to highlight violence against women in Lima on Nov. 25.
“The national queen must be the ambassador of ordinary women, of all women who have no voice,” Newton said.
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