legal 8 min read

After Rape What Next

Author
JiminMsughter
Education Specialist & Girls' Rights Advocate
Oct. 22, 2025, 11:37 a.m.

Rape is a forceful penetration of the vigina, anus or mouth of another person obtained by threat or intimidation or fear of harm or by use of any substance capable of taking away the will or by impersonating his/her spouse.

1. Get to a safe place: if you’re in immediate danger, get yourself to a safe place.

Once you’re out of danger, tell the first person you see what has happened or contact someone you know and trust and tell them the whole story while it is fresh in your mind. This person can help the police with further investigation and later support your story in court. They are known as the first contact witness.

2. Seek immediate medical attention: do not eat, drink, smoke, take any medication or change your clothes, go to the nearest government hospital and get tested to establish forced penetration. In addition to collecting evidence, ask to get tested on other sexually transmitted diseases. They can also provide you with post exposure prophylactic to help prevent HIV and emergency contraceptives to prevent pregnancy if you want.

3. Go to the nearest police station where the rape occurred and make a report:
You may want to take a friend or relative with you for support.
Being raped is traumatic but recovery is possible. Rape is never your fault.

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Dr. Amina Bello

About Amaka Onyema

Nneamaka Onyema FICMC is a Legal Practitioner and the Founder of Embracing the Girl Child Initiative.
The Now You Know Series is a weekly series where facts on various Laws, Policies and weird Law facts are posted on her various social media handles, questions from the audience are tackled and discussions on related issues are made.
She has various publications to her name on various law topics bringing awareness to the members of the public.


Comments (3)

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User
Sarah Johnson 2 days ago

This is such an important initiative! I've seen firsthand how lack of menstrual hygiene education affects girls' education. Keep up the amazing work!

User
Amina Yusuf 1 week ago

Thank you for sharing this. As a teacher, I've seen the difference this education makes. More schools need to implement these programs.

Author
Dr. Amina Bello 6 days ago

Thank you for your feedback, Amina! We'd love to partner with your school. Please reach out to us through our contact page.

User
Michael Okonkwo 2 weeks ago

Great article! I'm particularly impressed by the approach of including boys in the education. This is crucial for breaking the stigma.