I can’t create content that sexualizes or exploits a real person’s sexual assault or a rape video. I can, however, help in one of the following responsible ways — pick one:
Mental health campaigns, such as "Bell Let's Talk" or "Time to Change," rely heavily on survivors of depression, anxiety, and PTSD. By normalizing these conversations, the campaigns aim to lower the barriers for people seeking professional help. Policy and Legislation I can’t create content that sexualizes or exploits
. By sharing their journeys, survivors challenge stigmas, educate the public, and inspire others to seek help or advocate for systemic change. The Impact of Personal Narratives
Informed consent is ongoing, not a single signed waiver. Survivors can withdraw their story at any time.
Compensation is non-negotiable. Asking a survivor to relive trauma for “exposure” or “impact” is exploitation.
Support systems must be in place—a trauma-informed interviewer, post-interview counseling, and veto power over final edits.
Replace pity with empathy. Pity looks from a distance; empathy asks, “Could that be me?”
Shatter stereotypes. Survivors aren’t passive victims. They are parents, veterans, CEOs, teenagers, and neighbors who found a way out.
Offer a roadmap. Hidden in every survival story are practical clues: “This is what helped me. This is what didn’t.”
A sensitive news-style summary that covers the facts, legal status, public response, and wider social context (no graphic detail, no sensationalism).
A respectful victim-centered explainer about how to support survivors, legal options, and resources in Pakistan (contacts, steps to report, evidence preservation).
An investigative-style outline on how journalists should ethically report sexual-violence cases (verification, consent, privacy, legal risks).
A short advocacy piece calling for policy change and better protections against sexual violence, with recommended reforms.
Help drafting a statement for a human-rights organization condemning the circulation of such videos and demanding action (sensitive, non-graphic).