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“It is a woman’s fundamental right…to walk the streets and not be groped”

January 8, 2016 By HKearl

In the wake of the mass attacks on German women last week, Musa Okwonga (“a poet, author, sportswriter, broadcaster, musician, public relations consultant and commentator on current affairs”) wrote a powerful piece on his blog titled, “How to deal with the sexual assaults in Cologne and Hamburg.”

The whole piece is worth a read, and I especially appreciate his final paragraph:

“Why don’t we just start with the premise that it is a woman’s fundamental right, wherever she is in the world, to walk the streets and not be groped. And why don’t we see this as a perfect moment for men, regardless of our ethnic backgrounds, to get genuinely angry about the treatment of women in public spaces: to reject with fury the suggestion that we are somehow conditioned by society forever to treat women as objects, condemned by our uncontrollable sexual desires to lunge at them as they walk past. Let’s do our best to challenge the rampant misogyny which has gone on worldwide for far too long, and reject whatever lessons of sexist repression we may have been taught. Because women are tired of telling us about this, and exhausted of fighting a battle that for too long has gone overlooked.”

YES!. Thank you, Musa.

It is sad that a statement like his is so rare. We MUST have more men step up and speak out against gender-based violence.

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Filed Under: male perspective, News stories, street harassment Tagged With: germany, male allies, violence against women

Woman Killed in U.S., Women Migrants Targeted Abroad

January 7, 2016 By HKearl

Trigger Warning

Here are two upsetting stories for the new year so far (in addition to the attacks on women in Germany). We have so much more work to do.

First, I am sorry to share the news of another senseless death that started as a benign conversation, escalated to street harassment and then to gunshots!! Our thoughts are with Sara’s friends & family.

Sara Mutschlechner, image via Pix11.com
Sara Mutschlechner, image via Pix11.com

Via CNN:

“Sara Mutschlechner was driving through the Dallas suburb with three passengers around 2 a.m. (3 a.m. ET) Friday when a gray Honda Pilot with five to six males inside pulled up next to them, Kizer said at a Tuesday afternoon press conference.

“It was an amicable conversation to begin with, but quickly went downhill and some derogatory statements were made toward the female occupants of that vehicle,” the Denton Police spokesman told reporters.

Kizer described those “very derogatory” remarks as being of a “sexual nature,” adding that a male inside Mutschlechner’s vehicle responded by calling them out as offensive.

“Some comments were made back towards him, even a couple of threats were thrown,” the police spokesman said. “About that time, they were driving through the intersection … when several shots were fired.”

One of those shots struck Mutschlechner in the head, according to Denton Police.

She quickly lost control of her car, which first hit another vehicle leaving a nearby parking lot before veering into an electrical pole.

The Honda Pilot, meanwhile, fled.

Mutschlechner, a University of North Texas student and member of the Zeta Tau Alpha sorority, died after being transported to an area hospital. She was a designated driver that night and had not been drinking, witnesses said.”

The second story comes from the New York Times and is about men targeting migrant women from countries like Syria for sexual abuse.

“Interviews with dozens of migrants, social workers and psychologists caring for traumatized new arrivals across Germany suggest that the current mass migration has been accompanied by a surge of violence against women. From forced marriages and sex trafficking to domestic abuse, women report violence from fellow refugees, smugglers, male family members and even European police officers. There are no reliable statistics for sexual and other abuse of female refugees….

As some women painted their hands with henna and others traded frustrations about the time it was taking to get refugee status, Samar, a 35-year-old former employee of the Syrian Finance Ministry, opened up about the particular stress of being a woman on the move. Bombed out of her home in Darayya, a suburb of Damascus that early in the civil war became known for antigovernment protests, Samar spent 14 months on the road alone with her three daughters, ages 2, 8 and 13.

“I did not leave them out of my sight for one minute,” she said in Arabic, speaking through an interpreter. She and other single mothers slept in shifts along the way, watching over their daughters and one another.

But in Izmir, Turkey, about to board a boat to Greece, Samar was robbed and left with no money to pay the smuggler. A stocky man who called himself Omar, he offered to take her for free, but only if she had sex with him. Samar had heard him before, at night, in the hostel where she and other refugee women were staying, “going to this room and that.”

“Everybody knows there are two ways of paying the smugglers,” she said. “With money or with your body.”

But she refused, and Omar became angry. That night he burst into Samar’s room, threatening her and her daughters before her screaming chased him away. Samar stayed in Turkey for almost a year to work and save up the 4,000 euros needed for the remainder of the journey.

Sitting with her youngest daughter curled on her lap, Samar concluded: “Almost all men in the world are bad.”

Across town, in west Berlin, Ms. Höhne sympathized, but had a more nuanced view. There are no easy solutions, she said. Female-only shelters are not an option because most families want to stay together. Some women rely on men for protection. And, she added, “We mustn’t forget many of the men are traumatized, too.”

“There is no black and white, good and evil,” she said. “If we want to help the women, we need to help the men, too.”

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment Tagged With: germany, killed, migrants, Sara Mutschlechner, Syria, turkey, violence against women

Men Target More Than 100 German Women on New Year’s Eve

January 6, 2016 By HKearl

UPDATE 1/7: Here are a few more recent articles:

“German Muslims condemn Cologne attacks, fear consequences“

“Cologne sex attacks ‘require police rethink‘”

“Cologne New Year gang assaults: Victim, 18, says up to 30 men groped and robbed her and her 11 friends“

“German women use social media to mock the Cologne Mayor’s advice on preventing sexual assault“

Horrible news out of Germany, via BBC:

“The mayor of Cologne has summoned police for crisis talks after about 80 women reported sexual assaults and muggings by men on New Year’s Eve.

The scale of the attacks on women at the city’s central railway station has shocked Germany. About 1,000 drunk and aggressive young men were involved….Women were also targeted in Hamburg, but the Cologne assaults – near the city’s iconic cathedral – were the most serious, German media report. At least one woman was raped, and many were groped….

What is particularly disturbing is that the attacks appear to have been organised. Around 1,000 young men arrived in large groups, seemingly with the specific intention of carrying out attacks on women.”

The New York Times has more on the story, including this:

“Several hundred people gathered in front of Cologne’s cathedral late Tuesday to protest violence against women. Several groups promoting women’s rights have complained that the authorities have not taken allegations of sexual abuse of women in refugee shelters seriously enough.”

Our thoughts are with the women and hope they may find the support and help they need to heal.

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment Tagged With: germany, mob attack, new year's eve, protest, rape, sexual assault

“He would try all this on another girl or woman”

January 6, 2016 By Contributor

It all happened recently when I was coming back from my coaching classes. It was a little bit dark and a a guy 25 or 30 years old started following me.

I was scared and after some time he started to sing a vulgar song and started passing sexual comments about me. I was really scared and obsessed. Then a few meters away from my house, he suddenly came in front of me and said, “I want to have sex with you. When r u free????”

And I was like roasted from up to down. I grabbed his collar took him in front of the whole market away from my house and then i said, “Do you want to have sex with me, no problem, do whatever you want to do, you are free to do.”

And then I saw many teen girls like me and they came in front of me and asked what happened. I started crying and told everything that happened. Then after some seconds, I stopped crying and I said to him, “You don’t have a mother or sister in your home, do you? You don’t have respect or manners for how to talk to a girl?”

And in front of the whole crowd I said, “These type of guys are a true figure of demons.” And I slapped him and took him to the police and came back…

If i ignore it and kept all this in silence then next time he would try all this on another girl or woman!!!!

– Piyusha

Location: India

Share your street harassment story for the blog.
See the book 50 Stories about Stopping Street Harassers for more idea
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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment

Video: #JuventudSinAcoso: Nuestra generación puede erradicar el acoso callejero

January 5, 2016 By HKearl

Slavery used to be considered normal. Now it’s not. Women not having the right to vote used to be normal. Now it’s not. Street harassment used to be normal…. oh wait, it still is! But we can stop that. With our generation we can change things.

This is the powerful message conveyed in a new PSA by OCAC Chile. English subtitles and sign language interpretation are available. #JuventudSinAcoso

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Filed Under: male perspective, Resources, street harassment Tagged With: chile, video

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SSH will not publish any comment that is offensive or hateful and does not add to a thoughtful discussion of street harassment. Racism, homophobia, transphobia, disabalism, classism, and sexism will not be tolerated. Disclaimer: SSH may use any stories submitted to the blog in future scholarly publications on street harassment.
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