Deputy PM launches government TV ad campaign on sexual violence as he visits rape crisis centre in London
Nick Clegg has told a group of teenage girls that he finds it shocking that one-third of their peers have reported experiencing some form of sexual violence from a boyfriend.
Many young people dismiss the idea of "date rape", believing that the offence only occurs on rare occasions, and think sexual attacks are more likely to occur at the hands of a stranger, according to the government.
Visiting a rape crisis centre in Ealing, west London, Clegg spoke to a group of local schoolgirls girls aged between 16 and 18 about the issues after they were shown a government-funded TV advert intended to challenge the myths around sexual attacks.
The deputy prime minister said: "I think, for far too many people, they think rape is something that happens when you meet a stranger in a dark alley who inflicts physical violence on you.
"What we're trying to do with this advert is make sure that people know it's about, maybe, familiar relationships with people you've known for a long time, and maybe there's no violence involved at all.
"That's why it's so hard-hitting, because we really need to shift the way people think about this."
Cinema and online advertising campaigns are also part of the coalition push to address the issue. Funded by the Home Office, the advertising builds on the government's wider This is Abuse campaign, which aims to help teenagers develop healthy relationships.
Clegg told reporters: "We've got such a highly sexualised culture at the moment, and there are huge pressures.
"Any parent of a teenage girl will tell you there's huge pressures on teenage girls to conform to behave in a particular way, and I just think it's really important we give them the protection they need – that when they say no it means no, and the law is on their side.
"It's not normal, frankly, for governments to do things like this or for politicians to talk about it. But I think the scale of the problem now is big … it's a really big problem for a lot of teenagers and we need to address it."
He added: "What this ad campaign is seeking to achieve is to send an incredibly strong message to teenagers, and particularly to teenage boys, that, if you have sex with a girl who doesn't want to and doesn't consent, you're committing rape – it's a crime.
"When a girl says no, no means no means no. There's no ifs and buts.
"When you've got a situation where a third of teenage girls say they have been subject to sexual coercion and abuse, when lots of teenagers say in surveys that they think it's OK for a boy to expect to have sex with a girl they spend time with, something's going wrong and we need to challenge it. This is a very hard-hitting advertisement which challenges all of that."
NSPCC research shows that the problem is not just confined to girls, with 16% of boys also reporting that they have experienced some form of sexual violence from a boyfriend or girlfriend.
It found that the highest proportion of sexual abuse – 66% – is perpetrated by young people under the age of 18.
The adverts, aimed at 13 to 18-year-olds, feature a teenage girl being coerced into sex by a boy as a party goes on downstairs.
The girl says: "I don't want to," but the boy persists. A double of the boy then appears, watching the scene from behind an invisible wall.
The viewer is asked: "If you could see yourself, would you see rape?"
The adverts will run for a month on youth TV channels, starting on Monday night, during programmes such as E4's Skins.
The equalities minister, Lynne Featherstone, who also took part in the discussion with the girls, said: "Teenagers are inundated with information about relationships, from their friends, the internet and TV.
"This campaign aims to dispel the myths that can lead to acceptance of rape in relationships. Bringing the issue out in the open will help teenagers feel confident about challenging abuse when they see it and ultimately protect potential victims."