Privacy:
How the
separates
its men and women
Claims of sexual assault in
the military rose 24 percent in 2006, according to a Pentagon report
released Wednesday.
An older study found that
nearly half of all assaults in the Army take place in barracks. (Click here
for a PDF.) Given these dangers, how much privacy do women get when they're
deployed in the
It depends on what they're
doing there. In
The women usually curtain off
a single-sex section in the back with sheets and ponchos. But this kind of
self-segregation carries the risk of alienating women from their platoon,
depriving them of Army chatter, or making them seem as though they need special
treatment. In particular, females in leadership positions can't afford to live
apart from the male soldiers they command. For them this means changing clothes
inside sleeping bags — a practice many male soldiers also
adopt.
Women tend to get a little
more privacy in
To ward off sexual assaults
in the barracks, female soldiers below the rank of sergeant follow a buddy
system at all times — for getting around the base during the day as well as for
making bathroom visits in the middle of the night. (Former Abu Ghraib commander
Brig. Gen. Janis Karpinski even charged
that some women have died of dehydration because they feared going to the
latrines at night.)
Men are also encouraged to
use a buddy system, for a different purpose: Having another soldier with you is
supposed to keep you in line or provide a witness should trouble
occur.
Privacy is often the last
concern during convoy missions, when dozens of vehicles make dangerous trips
that last anywhere from 12 hours to a couple days. Convoys won't risk too many
roadside stops, so when nature calls, many soldiers of both genders cut their
one-liter water bottles in half and pee into the makeshift cup. Portable
urinals for women come in handy in these cases, but some female
soldiers refrain from drinking liquids and try to hold out until the next rest
stop — a practice that can lead to urinary tract
infections.
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