Denemek ALTIN - Özgür
Sex for money: the harm that ‘blessers’ can do to young women
Cape Times
|November 11, 2025
A “BLESSER” is typically an older, relatively wealthier man who provides a younger woman with money, gifts, school fees or lifestyle access in exchange for a relationship that includes sex.
Similar arrangements exist around the world, often called “sugar-daddy” relationships, but the South African version is closely tied to extreme inequality, youth unemployment, and a culture in which conspicuous consumption carries strong social currency. As a result, “blesser” has become a mainstream, even aspirational term among some young women, particularly in urban settings.
South Africa ranks as the most unequal country in the world, characterised by high unemployment rates and poverty, especially among young people (aged 15-24). Getting a “blesser” is an opportunity to gain access to a new social level, and often includes tangibles such as smartphones, clothing and money.
On the surface, transactional relationships can feel like a shortcut to independence or status. However, new evidence shows that these relationships come at a high cost.
As a researcher in health economics, social medicine, psychology and mental health, I have been studying transactional sexual relationships in South Africa for a number of years.
In a recent study, my colleagues and I presented the first national analysis of how relationships with blessers shape sexual health outcomes for adolescent girls and young women in South Africa.
These relationships expose young women to interrelated risks, including HIV infection, early pregnancy and gender-based violence. The risks all interact and reinforce one another within contexts of inequality and limited agency.
These patterns mirror other recent data showing that adolescent girls and young women in South Africa are twice as likely to be living with HIV as their male peers.
Research over the years has shown that the drivers of this gap include biological vulnerability, gender-power imbalances, economic dependence and age-disparate sexual partnerships. While blesser relationships may offer short-term rewards, the long-term consequences for health and well-being are severe.
Bu hikaye Cape Times dergisinin November 11, 2025 baskısından alınmıştır.
Binlerce özenle seçilmiş premium hikayeye ve 9.000'den fazla dergi ve gazeteye erişmek için Magzter GOLD'a abone olun.
Zaten abone misiniz? Oturum aç
Cape Times'den DAHA FAZLA HİKAYE
Cape Times
Verstappen sets bold record at Brazilian GP
MAX Verstappen continues to redefine Formula One excellence.
1 mins
November 12, 2025
Cape Times
Relegation fight set to intensify
AS the Betway Premiership campaign approaches its halfway mark, the lower half of the table has already produced a few surprises.
2 mins
November 12, 2025
Cape Times
Prince Albert man sentenced after DNA links him to rape and murder committed 12 years ago
FOR 12 years, the man who raped and murdered a Prince Albert woman in her fifties lived undetected among her family and neighbours.
2 mins
November 12, 2025
Cape Times
How first-time managers can build leadership mentality
MANAGERS are often spinning several plates all at once. To be successful, people managers must lead by example: setting and exceeding goals for their team, keeping workflows moving efficiently and providing the support needed to keep
3 mins
November 12, 2025
Cape Times
FNB, Mastercard unite to advance Africa's cross-border payments with launch of Globba
THE launch of Globba, a groundbreaking cross-border payments platform powered by Mastercard Move and integrated into FNB and RMB Private Banking apps, has set a new benchmark for digital financial connectivity across Africa.
3 mins
November 12, 2025
Cape Times
LEBANON RELEASES GADDAFI’S SON
THE Lebanese authorities have released Hannibal Gaddafi, the son of the late Libyan leader Muammar Gaddafi, on bail after nearly 10 years in custody over allegations he withheld information about a missing cleric
1 min
November 12, 2025
Cape Times
ANC HAS NOT LEARNT FROM THE PAST
THE ANC has become used to making it easy for voters to desert it.
1 mins
November 12, 2025
Cape Times
Disclosing someone's HIV status is not defamation
THE Bloemfontein High Court has overturned the R100,000 in damages awarded to a Union of Metal Workers of South Africa (Numsa) member against a colleague who disclosed her HIV status during a public meeting.
2 mins
November 12, 2025
Cape Times
Transgender inmate wins landmark ruling
A TRANSGENDER prisoner serving a life sentence scored a legal victory when the Equality Court ruled that she has the legal right for the State to provide her with hormonal treatment.
2 mins
November 12, 2025
Cape Times
G20 confronts colonial and gendered power
It must address the lived realities of intersecting oppressions
2 mins
November 12, 2025
Listen
Translate
Change font size
