How to stay safe in South Africa? Play rugby, says women's captain

The 25-year-old, Babalwa Latsha (right) said the South African men's first Rugby World Cup win under a black captain on Saturday had "ignited a flame" in her team to win the 2021 women's World Cup. Photo: Phando/Jikelo/African News Agency(ANA)

The 25-year-old, Babalwa Latsha (right) said the South African men's first Rugby World Cup win under a black captain on Saturday had "ignited a flame" in her team to win the 2021 women's World Cup. Photo: Phando/Jikelo/African News Agency(ANA)

Published Nov 7, 2019

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Johannesburg – The

Springbok women's captain, Babalwa Latsha, said on Thursday that

the rugby field is one of the few places she feels safe in South

Africa, where a woman is murdered every three hours.

The 25-year-old star said the South African men's first

Rugby World Cup win under a black captain on Saturday had

"ignited a flame" in her team to win the 2021 women's World Cup.

"No one can attack you on a rugby field. No man can point a

gun at you, hurt you, throw a fist at you. We feel safe there,

but we should feel safe everywhere," Latsha said in a phone

interview with the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

About 3,000 women in South Africa were murdered in 2018,

which is more than five times higher than the global average,

according to the World Health Organization.

Latsha, who comes from one of Cape Town's biggest townships,

Khayelitsha, said the women's team had "drawn strength from the

men's team, and also from themselves as women" to qualify for

the upcoming World Cup in New Zealand.

Latsha's love for rugby came quite late in life, at the age

of 20, when a rugby-training programme called Vuka came to

Khayelitsha to train and search for grassroots talent.

"I fell in love with the sport," said Latsha. "It gave me a

sense of belonging, ownership and power. It is the one place

where I can just be myself fully, without worrying who will

think what or say what about me."

Latsha said she has spent her life answering to people "with

the audacity to ask about my gender" for being very muscular.

"People in the street will stare at me, or walk up to me and

ask why I look the way I do. You just have to develop a thick

skin," she said.

"The truth is, to society, my body is an anomaly but on the

rugby field it is a marvel."

Latsha said she felt for Caster Semenya, South Africa's

double Olympic champion who has hyperandrogenism, a medical

condition, and was barred by The International Association of

Athletics Federations (IAAF) because of her testosterone levels.

"It is heartbreaking what she has been through as a woman,"

said Latsha, referring to the global athletics governing body's

requirement that Semenya take hormonal drugs that made her feel

sick to lower her testosterone levels.

"Someone of that calibre, with such a natural strength and

prowess, has had to be curtailed to be herself. She is the best

in the world. The world needs to rise up to her level."

According to the World Rugby rankings, the South African

women's team is the best is Africa and 15th globally.

Latsha, also a law graduate, hopes to set up a sporting

agency for women, which would educate them about their rights to

equality and freedom from discrimination, as well as providing

mentorship and training to thrive in the sporting world.

"Sport can educate, empower and break down stereotypes about

women," said Latsha.

"Women are taught to be submissive and this contributes to

the normalisation of violence against women. The least we can do

as sportspeople is to continue to be trailblazers who refuse to

accept that is normal."

After mass protests against gender based violence in

September, President Cyril Ramaphosa announced plans to

strengthen the criminal justice system and train counsellors.

"We are created for greatness," said Latsha. "(The

Springboks') win has shown us our own dreams are not too big,

too wild, too impossible to achieve."

Thomson Reuters Foundation

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