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Afghanistan: Harassment and driving, government action?

October 14, 2014 By HKearl

Check out my article for the Washington Postabout Afghan women braving harassment and family disprovable to drive:

Zainab Zawol Shahidy

“Seventeen-year-old Zainab Zawol Shahidy >was driving her Toyota 4Runner home from school in Kabul recently when she noticed two men in a vehicle following her. “One of them pointed a gun at me and threatened me to drive along in their direction, but I refused and kept driving faster to reach home as soon as I could,” she said.

She was forced to pull over when they blocked her. One of the men threw a slip of paper at her with his phone number and said if she didn’t call him, he would kidnap her. She made it home and called security. Thankfully she has not seen these men since.

Although there are a growing numbers of women drivers in Kabul, the sight of Shahidy behind the wheel is still unusual. Everywhere she goes, she gets curious stares and frequent harassment, ranging from people making fun of her for driving to threats. “I can’t drive to places too distant from where I live due to the risk of kidnapping,” she told me through the translation of her brother, Ali Shahidy, a psychology major at Norwich University in Vermont.

Despite the risk and danger, Shahidy says she loves to drive. Besides, she said, she faces more harassment when she walks or takes public transportation.”

Related, from Human Rights Watch:

“Afghanistan’s new government should take urgent steps to combat sexual harassment of women in education, employment, and public life, Human Rights Watch said today. There are no laws in Afghanistan that specifically prohibit sexual harassment or protect victims.

Government institutions lack effective policies to prevent and punish sexual harassment, Human Rights Watch said.  On October 5, 2014, President Ashraf Ghani described levels of sexual harassment in schools as “shocking.” He ordered the Ministry of Education to report every incident of sexual harassment in schools to enable action against harassers, and directed relevant ministries to develop a plan to counter sexual harassment in educational institutions.

“President Ghani’s recognition of sexual harassment in Afghanistan as ‘shocking’ is spot-on,” said Heather Barr, senior women’s rights researcher at Human Rights Watch. “The Afghan government should promptly enact a law against sexual harassment and ensure that every government institution develops and implements an anti-sexual harassment policy.”

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment

Day of the Girl 2014

October 11, 2014 By HKearl

Via Teen Library Toolbox

Today is the 3rd annual International Day of the Girl, an opportunity to reflect on the status of girls in the world and their needs.

I, of course, always think about street harassment. I was harassed as a teenage girl and the older I get, the more outraged I am about my experiences and about the harassment and assault girls and teenagers continue to face today in public spaces. It angers me that the depictions of street harassment in the media would like us to believe it “only” happens to adult women and is no big deal, but the reality is, teenagers are targeted the most — and often by adult men. In fact, our national survey found that most people who are harassed (female and male) begin to experience it before age 17.

You can read stories on our blog showing this too,

Like K in New York shared her story… “I’ll never forget being in middle school and walking around my neighborhood and having these middle-aged men cat calling me. I was a 12-year-old girl, I wanted to dress pretty but the constant stares and whistles from older men made me feel insecure. It felt as if I wasn’t a person just a body with a vagina walking around.

At times I would yell and say you are disgusting but I was afraid that they might chase me down, so I didn’t do it as often. The majority of the time I would look down and walk away quickly. I was in middle school and these men were older and stronger than I was; all the news story scared me of what these men could do.”

Or Anonymous in CA who reflected on a lifetime of harassment…”I started being harassed as a pedestrian the summer I turned nine. A driver honked, catcalled, and threw a penny that hit me. Now I am 39 and I keep thinking I will eventually grow old enough to fall off the radar. Being honked at, whistled at, shouted at, followed, groped, and grabbed makes me angry, shaken up, and stressed out.”

Summer Al-Saleh, a high school senior at Foothill Technology High School in Ventura, California, wrote about street harassment for her school paper this week. She gave me permission to excerpt it:

“Over the past few months, I cannot begin to count how many times I have been harassed when I was by myself or accompanied with friends.

As I was on a run earlier in the summer, two middle-aged men drove by, stared, and whistled at me. They drove away, probably laughing at the fact that they caught me off guard and caused me to jump out of initial shock. They drove away, not even considering that I was on a run, trying to concentrate, existing in such a way that has no relative bearing on their existence, something that is very difficult for street harassers to understand.

When I was walking out of the grocery store two young men started following me into the parking lot, while asking questions and making comments about my appearance. As I briskly walked away they got the satisfaction of knowing that I was angry, disturbed, and threatened. They, just like the other men, did not see me as a person with somewhere to be, something to do, and something on my mind.

While finishing a run with my teammates, two middle-aged men drove by, slowed down to get our attention, yelled something that was incomprehensible and made kissy faces at us. The thing about this specific encounter, the former encounters, and other women’s experiences is that they are all much too similar: each and every act of harassment is steeped in entitlement. So much entitlement that it’s difficult to grasp how someone could do something so inconsiderate, objectifying, and privileged that they won’t even accept or may not even realize that what they’re doing is harassment.

Their over-flowing sense of entitlement coupled with their lack of sensibility creates a situation that makes women feel unsafe and uncomfortable in public spaces. It can and does determine where women choose to go, what we choose to wear, and where we choose to live. Ultimately, it limits our choices and freedom to be safe in public.”

What is different from when I was a teenager is that there is a lot more awareness about this issue. And thanks to social media and sites like mine, I know there are places teenagers can go to for advice, for support and to share their stories. Which is so important.

So today, I honor all the girls who are bravely speaking out and demanding the right to be safe in public spaces!

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment Tagged With: day of the girl, harassment, teenagers

This Saturday: A Hearing on Girls of Color

October 9, 2014 By HKearl

If you’re in NYC with some free time on Saturday, check out this important event organized by Girls for Gender Equity. Our board member Maliyka Muhammad will attend on behalf of SSH.

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Filed Under: Events, street harassment

Man slashes woman’s neck in NY

October 9, 2014 By HKearl

Trigger Warning

More bad news about street harassment turned violent, via My Fox NY:

“The NYPD is on the hunt for the man who slashed a woman’s neck in a building lobby in Jamaica, Queens after she refused to talk to him.

Police say it happened at around 5:17 a.m. on Oct. 1 inside 90-23 171st Street.

The man approached the 26-year-old victim and tried to engage her in what police described as an “unwanted” conversation. When she turned away, police say he grabbed her from behind and cut her neck with “a cutting instrument.”

The woman sustained serious injuries. She was listed in critical but stable condition at a hospital.

Security camera video shows the man approaching the woman. Police released the video in the hopes it will help them catch the attacker.

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment

Harasser shoots and kills a woman who rejected his advances

October 7, 2014 By HKearl

Heart-breaking news. Street harassment is a serious, serious issue.

YourBlackWorld.net

“A 27 year old Detroit woman was fαtally shοt by a man she rejected while at a social club on Saturday.

Police say Spears, along with five other people, were discovered inside the hall early Sunday.

Investigators say a 38 year old man approached Spears and tried to talk to her, but she rejected his advances.

“He said, ‘Can I get your name, your number,’” Spears’ relative told FOX 2 News..  “She said, ‘I have a man I can’t talk to you.’” Still, the man reportedly harassed Spears at the club until 2am.

Eventually the man had to be escorted outside by security where he got into a fight and opened fire. Spears was shοt in the head by the man when he decided to pull his weapon and shoοt, The Detroit Free Press reports.”

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment

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