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June 7, 2012

The Daily Star - Diab announces plan for school counselors, June 7 2012


BEIRUT: Education Minister Hasan Diab said Wednesday that the ministry would soon forward a draft law to the Cabinet to place counselors at every public school, days after reports that a teacher allegedly sexually abused students shocked the country.
“These counselors should be watchful [of possible abuse],” Diab told The Daily Star. “Nobody knows how often these incidents are happening, whether often or infrequent, but we are raising awareness so that they will not happen in the future.”
Pierre Shalash, a 22-year-old teacher at St. Joseph Aintoura College in Mount Lebanon, is facing charges of sexually abusing schoolgirls aged between 6 and 8 years old. The school announced earlier in the week that it had fired him.
The justice, social affairs and education ministers have also announced the establishment of a special committee to draft a plan of action, with Social Affairs Minister Wael Abu Faour promising a comprehensive and transparent investigation into the case.
Shalash is currently being investigated by the office for Preserving Public Order and Conduct under the supervision of Mount Lebanon Public Prosecutor Judge Claude Karam.
Maroun Abu Sharaf, the lawyer representing the parents of the alleged victims, said that the investigation would determine whether some of the students were raped.
“Physicians will determine whether rape has really taken place, but for sure there were rape attempts,” Abu Sharaf told The Daily Star.
Abu Sharaf said that initially, he had been representing the families of nine victims but that number had dropped to four after some families withdrew, fearing the repercussions of the cases being publicized.
Abu Sharaf said parents of the victims had been angered that the names of their children had been made public Tuesday during the program “Inta Hurr” (“You are free”), aired by MTV.
The lawyer said that the TV program violated “the sacredness of childhood,” adding that he would take “proper” legal action. “I informed the general prosecutor and the public prosecutor of Mount Lebanon about this matter,” he said.
Encouraged by the willingness of the students’ families to come forward, relatives of a student in Jbeil who was allegedly the victim of sexual abuse months ago have also now approached the judiciary.
According to Ketty Sarouphim, an associate professor of psychology at the Lebanese American University, sexual abuse and rape in particular can have long-term effects, while the extent to which a child is affected depends on the child’s personality, how resilient or vulnerable he or she is and the level of family support.
“To a large extent ... it depends on how they [children] interpret the event itself,” she explained.
Sarouphim said that if children interpret it as a trauma or as a violation of their bodies, they might no longer be able to build trusting relationships.
“People who are supposed to take care of them and protect them inflicted harm on them; it is the most horrible thing,” she said.
Abused children may also have problems being intimate with someone, according to Sarouphim.
She said that, unfortunately, some children might perceive abuse as an act of love and not be aware of the impact.
Asked what might drive a teacher to engage in such acts, Sarouphim said that Shalash, if found guilty, is likely a pedophile. “It is no longer sexual harassment, but pedophilia,” she said. “It is when men are aroused sexually by children; it’s a real mental disorder.”
Sarouphim said there is treatment but no cure for pedophilia.
Abu Faour said Tuesday that the children involved in the case would receive psychological treatment.


http://www.dailystar.com.lb/News/Local-News/2012/Jun-07/176007-diab-announces-plan-for-school-counselors.ashx#axzz1x5XqZCLy

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