Skip to playerSkip to main contentSkip to footer
  • yesterday
Swedish journalist Kajsa Ekis Ekman says data can be interpreted and warns that statistics, like rape numbers, can be misleading.

Transcript
00:00Now, let me just say something about the data that the Polish comrade presented.
00:04Data doesn't lie, but it can be interpreted.
00:06I think you know very well that there are countries where there are zero rape cases reported.
00:14Does that mean that there is no rape in these countries?
00:17Or does that mean that women don't dare to report?
00:21You don't have zero. You have one of the highest levels in Europe.
00:24There is a campaign during many, many years that encouraged women to report rape, you know, from the police and from society.
00:34So reported rape cases do not reflect actual rapes.
00:37They represent, and every researcher knows this, propensity of denouncing rapes.
00:44Now, second of all, you have to know that in Sweden, if one man rapes one woman a hundred times, that counts as a hundred rapes.
00:51In some countries, that counts as one rape.
00:53So you have to know how to understand and analyze statistics as well.
00:57You can't just hold up a paper, comrade.

Recommended