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Late June 2016 News Round-Up

June 21, 2016 By HKearl

BBC, “No woman ever turned down a barking guy? Right?”

“Women are using the hashtag #NoWomanEver to humorously highlight their not-so-funny experiences of wolf whistles, sexual comments from passing strangers and other street harassment.

Although the hashtag isn’t entirely new it’s been used more than 140,000 times in the last couple of days after an American social media user called Miss Black Awareness revived it to sarcastically applaud the actions of a man whose unwanted advances she had seemingly recently suffered.”

 

The Guardian, “Brazil and Argentina unite in protest against culture of sexual violence“

“While gender violence occurs worldwide, the problem has come to the fore in several countries in Latin America through the work of prominent feminist groups, many of which argue their region is particularly plagued by social insecurity and male-dominated traditions.”

 

The Guardian, “Jordan’s first self-defence centre for women boosts fight for rights”

“It started out as an ordinary day for Rasha Salih, a young woman who works as an accountant for a private trading company in the centre of Amman. Like most women in Jordan, she wears a headscarf and modest clothes when she goes out.

After a long day at work, the 26-year-old returned to her compound in the Shmeisani district at around 6pm and took the lift to her flat. A young man was already in the lift when she got in. He started to flirt with her, and before she knew it, he was trying to rip off her shirt. There was nowhere to escape, so Salih put her self-defence training to use by directing a few kicks to her attacker’s head and stomach.

She followed her attacker out on to the street when he tried to flee, and handed him over to the police. He was eventually sentenced to three years for attempted rape.

“I only recognised the value of self-defence training when I was struggling to escape at the hands of my attacker,” says Salih. “I felt I had a confidence that I hadn’t had before, I was able to overcome my fear and protect myself. It was an incredible feeling.”

Salih is one of more than 2,000 women who have been trained in self-defence at Amman’s SheFighter studio.”

 

International Business Times, “After Jo Cox’s tragic murder we need to stop ignoring death and rape threats to female MPs”

“We have created a widespread normalisation of the idea that women who dare to put their heads above the political parapet become legitimate targets for violent and sexual abuse; that they deserve to be silenced. Every time people have responded to death and rape threats and sexual abuse and harassment against female politicians by brushing it off, suggesting they should simply grow a thicker skin, or saying that it “comes with the territory,” they have incrementally contributed to the acceptance of such behaviour.

None of them has directly caused or condoned a physical attack like the one on Jo Cox. But that doesn’t mean that our attitudes towards the abuse of politicians, and in particular female politicians, don’t need to be urgently re-examined.”

 

Fusion, “A lot more NYC women are stepping forward to report sexual harassment on the subway”

“More New York City women are stepping forward to report what has been a longstanding problem on the subway: sexual harassment.

There have been 458 reported sex crimes, not including rape, in the subway through Monday, compared with 299 through the same period last year, NYPD Transit Chief Joseph Fox said in testimony before the Metropolitan Transportation Authority board. That’s a 53% increase, the Wall Street Journal reported Monday.

Fox attributed the jump to an increase in victims reporting the crimes rather than an actual uptick in offenses…

In 2014, the MTA set up a website where victims can report incidents.

If current rates continue, the subway system is on track to finish 2016 with about 900 violations, a 22% increase from last year. Fox said the annual numbers had hovered around 600 offenses. In 2014, there 621 and in 2013, there were 647.”

 

RT.com, “Majority of female Israeli MPs faced sexual harassment – survey”

“At least 28 out the Israeli parliament’s 32 female members have experienced sexual harassment or assault, and at least two of the cases took place in the Knesset building, a recent survey has found.

The survey carried out by Israeli Channel 2 encouraged the lawmakers to speak openly about the challenges they have faced in their everyday life and at work.”

 

The Telegraph, “Three in four urban women have experienced sexual harassment in worldwide ‘epidemic‘”

“Three in four women have been subjected to harassment and violence in cities across the world, according to new research by ActionAid UK, which described the situation as an “epidemic”.

On average, 40 per cent of women who took part in the YouGov poll in Brazil, India, Thailand and the UK, said that they had been groped in public – the incidents ranged from being followed to sexual abuse.

The research has been launched ahead of the charity’s International Safe Cities for Women Day, in a bid to tackle the urban violence that women and girls struggle with globally. In light of this, ActionAid  is urging the UK to contribute at least £70 million from its existing aid budget to help protect vulnerable women over the next three years.”

 

The Guardian, “Jessica Valenti: my life as a ‘sex object’”

“When you catch a cold or a virus, your body has ways of letting you know that you are sick. But what diagnosis do you give to the shaking hands you get after a stranger whispers “pussy” in your ear on your way to work? What medicine can you take to stop being afraid that the cab driver is not actually taking you home? And what about those of us who walk through all this without feeling any of it – what does it say about the hoops our brain had to jump through to get to ambivalence? I don’t believe any of us walk away unscathed.”

Read an edited extract from Jessica Valenti’s memoir Sex Object, published by Harper Collins at £16.99. To order a copy for £12.99, go to the Guardian bookshop or call 0330 333 6846.

 

CBC News, “Skateboarders who stopped sex assault among Calgarians honoured for bravery at Chief’s Awards Gala”

“Four skateboarders received special recognition after they stepped in when a man was sexually assaulting a woman, scared him off, chased him down, and held him until police arrested him.”

 

CTV NewsVancouver, “Men suspected of attacking Good Samaritan on SkyTrain identified”

“Update: Three men suspected of attacking a Good Samaritan for intervening in sexual harassment on SkyTrain last week have been identified, according to police….

———

Previous story: Police are searching for three suspects who allegedly punched a Good Samaritan for telling them to quit harassing women on SkyTrain last week.

Transit Police said the trio of men boarded a train at Sperling Station around 11:20 p.m. Thursday and started making threatening comments to other passengers.

They told one woman they were going to “follow her home,” police said, and one of the suspects sat down beside another woman and “made jokes to his two friends about raping her.”

At that point, a Good Samaritan intervened and told him to leave her alone.

Police said the suspect became aggressive, swearing at the Good Samaritan and threatening to follow him off the train – which two of the suspects eventually did.

“At Lougheed Station, the man got off the train and was followed by two of the suspects who punched him in the face and upper body,” Transit Police said in a statement.

The assailants got back on the train, and the victim boarded another car to push the emergency strip and call for police.

One of the suspects found him and punched him in the face again before the trio ran away from the scene.”

 

Quartz, “Mayor Sadiq Khan has banned body-shaming ads from London’s transit system”

“In one of the first high-profile moves of his administration, London mayor Sadiq Khan announced on Monday (June 13) that body-shaming ads will no longer be allowed to appear on the city’s buses and underground trains.”

 

Mic, “This Agoraphobic Woman Had the Perfect Response to Street Harassment”

“‘Dear driver who yelled at me for taking a selfie on the sidewalk outside Trader Joe’s, I know what you thought you were seeing,’ Mae wrote. ‘Just a self-absorbed, shallow millennial, documenting a mundane task for no reason. ‘Stupid kid,’ you might have thought, ‘not every little thing has to be documented. Put your phone away and get on with your life.’ But here’s the thing. I also know what you were unable to see: I am agoraphobic.’

According to Mae, the driver yelled ‘nobody cares that you’re going to the fucking grocery store.’

But people did. Mae wrote she has not been out in public by herself for three years, due to her agoraphobia, and ‘even when going in public with loved ones, I can become wracked by anxiety, crippled by panic attacks where I could barely breathe or talk.’

‘This morning, alone in my apartment, I experienced a flash of strange courage,’ Mae continued. ‘For once, I didn’t wait around to see if it would stay … [going outside] felt powerful. I felt free.'”

 

Guardian, “For many women, metal is our home – so why don’t we feel safe at gigs?”

“That people like me, my friend or anyone else should have to avoid concerts for fear of sexual attack perpetuates the worst metal stereotypes, shuts out the genre’s diverse community and is contrary to the freedom that the music represents. Metal gigs offer us all the chance to release our aggression in a healthy way. But only with respect is this accomplished.”

 

Syracuse.com, “Downtown Syracuse accident caused by driver honking at woman: witnesses”

“A two-vehicle accident at North Salina and James streets this morning was caused by a man honking at a woman who was walking to work, witnesses said.

The man was driving a black Hyundai on Salina Street about 8:20 a..m. when he started honking at the woman, several witnesses said. The car then pulled out into the intersection and struck a pickup truck pulling a utility trailer, they said.

Minutes after the accident, the driver of the Hyundai lay nearly motionless in the road next to his car. Ambulances arrived within minutes and the man, who was conscious, was put on a stretcher.”

 

Medium.com, “The global street harassment myth that has to die”

“I recently realized that about ten years have passed since I took my first job in a women’s rights organization. I have learned many things over these years. Here is one of them: the oldest and most widely held myth about ‪#‎streetharassment is that women’s choices about their clothing determines whether or not they are harassed.

This is especially infuriating to me because I have been harassed in rural Faryab (that is in Afghanistan) while wearing a long dress and a large scarf that covered not only my hair but also my shoulders and chest and I have been harassed in Washington, D.C. while wearing a big winter coat, work pants and high rain boots. Also infuriating is that in both instances when I spoke up against the disrespect, my clothing was blamed.

Here is why the myth that women’s clothing leads to harassment has to die….”

 

The Frisky, “Ryan Gosling Thinks “Women Are Better Than Men” And Dropped Some Truth Bombs About Inequality”

“Asked about the enormous crush the female sex collectively has on him, and how he’s arguably objectified by the same crowd of people who want society to stop objectifying them, Gosling responded:

‘It’s our time as men to be on the receiving end of the stick. I grew up with women so I’ve always been aware of it. When my mother and I walked to the grocery store, men would circle the block in cars. It was very, very scary, especially as a young boy. Very predatory — a hunt.’

As Game of Thrones’ Kit Harrington recently pointed out, attractive men in Hollywood face objectification (ogling at topless pictures of Channing Tatum, or Kit Harrington, or Ryan Gosling — we’re all guilty of it). But of course, it’s worth noting that while men who strip down are often celebrated, women who do same face no shortage of slut-shaming.

At any rate, Gosling makes the good point that the “unwanted fuss” made by “women and gay men,” which the Evening Standard asked him about, is pretty different from the “unwanted fuss” men make toward women, which, in many terrifying cases, can be street harassment or stalking.”

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment Tagged With: Argentina, brazil, canada, jordan, politics, self defense, UK, usa

Flight Attendant Stops Groper

June 21, 2016 By HKearl

Many thanks to this flight attendant for stepping in to protect this 13-year-old girl from this disgusting, predatory man!

Via CNN.com:

“A flight attendant distributing snacks saw Camp’s hand near the girl’s crotch, according to the complaint.

She described seeing a tear coming down the girl’s cheek and ordered Camp to change seats.

She moved the girl up a number of rows, ordered Camp farther back on the aircraft and notified the captain, the complaint said. The captain told Port of Portland Police, and the suspect was arrested by police and FBI agents when the plane landed in Portland.”

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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: adult man, bystander, girl, groping

Milwaukee Bus Driver Hero!

June 20, 2016 By HKearl

MilwuakeeWomen like this restore my faith in humanity.

Via TMJ4:

““Driver Sharon Chambers was on her route Monday, about to pull away from a stop at Sherman Blvd. and Silver Spring Rd., when she noticed a girl waving in her direction, MCTS says.

‘I thought she was just running to catch the bus, but as she walked in front of the bus I noticed she was crying,’ Chambers said. ‘I told her to get on the bus and let her know no one was going to mess with her on my bus.’
 
The girl told the driver that a man had been following her and harassing her. MCTS says Chambers drove away from the area in case the man was still on her trail.
 
Chambers then called into MCTS dispatch, who notified police. While they waited for police at 51st and Silver Spring Rd., the driver called the girl’s grandmother, and tried to comforting the teen as well.
 
‘Don’t worry about it. You are safe. I will fight for you; no one is going to hurt you,’ Chambers can be heard saying on surveillance video.”“
THANK YOU Sharon for being amazing.
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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: Bus driver hero, bystander, girl harassed, Milwaukee

Gay Clubs Should be Safe

June 14, 2016 By HKearl

Half-staff LGBT flag in DCThe shooting at the Orlando gay club over the weekend is horrendous. That Latinx LGBQT-identified people were attacked and killed in a space that was supposed to be safe is disheartening and enraging. We mourn the victims and stand with the survivors and the families affected.

We stand with those who strive for equality, acceptance, and a world where people are not hated, harassed, abused or killed because of their identity.

As a HuffPost blogger Denise Frohman wrote:

“We know homophobia didn’t end with marriage equality. We know the shooting in Orlando didn’t happen overnight — we have a cultural problem that perpetuates homophobia, racism, sexism, and Islamophobia in our schools, our streets, and on our televisions.

We are the work we have to do.

I want feel safe everywhere I go. I want liberation for all of us who live under the threat of violence…

I mourn those killed in Orlando, their families, their partners, and the peace of mind we cherished in these spaces. Tomorrow and the day after, we will work, as we’ve always done to reclaim space, even the ones we built for ourselves.”

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Filed Under: LGBTQ, News stories Tagged With: hate crime, murder, shooting

Late May 2016 News Round-Up

May 30, 2016 By HKearl

Yahoo News, “These 3 Women Allegedly Stopped a Date Rape in Progress in California“

“‘Monica, Marla, and I were at FIG at the Fairmont for their delicious happy hour (‘Fig at 5.’ Treat yourself),’ one of the women, who goes by the name Sonia Ulrich on Facebook, posted. ‘I was going on about something and saw Monica staring behind and making a funny face. I stopped. ‘What’s going on?’ After a few second she said ‘That guy just put something in her drink.’

Ulrich wrote she had to ‘Warn her. Tell her to get up and leave this creep. Make him drink it. Something.’ So she lingered in the bathroom to meet the woman in question and said her date had dropped an unknown substance into her beverage, only for the woman to say the man who did it was her ‘best friend.’

The women informed the staff of the restaurant as well, triggering an uneasy wait of nearly 45 minutes for the Santa Monica Police Department to arrive.”

Refinery29, “Meet The Heroic Campaigners Making Cities Safer For Women“

“New research from ActionAid shows that 79% of women living in cities in India, 86% in Thailand, and 89% in Brazil have been subjected to harassment or violence in public. That’s why ActionAid have declared today, Friday the 20th of May, as International Safe Cities for Women Day.

While we might assume that women have it much better in the UK, in the research project interviewing 2,500 women, ActionAid found that 75% of British respondents had experienced some form of violence or harassment in cities. And while 36% of women in UK cities outside the capital feel at risk of harassment on public transport, this rises to 51% on London transport. New mayor Sadiq Khan identified the issue in his campaign, saying: “Women face specific challenges on our transport network that are not currently being addressed.” Citing the reports of sexual offences on London transport almost tripling in five years, he vowed: “As mayor I will take these problems seriously.”

Evening Standard, “Half of women feel at risk of harassment on London public transport“

“This ranges from 39 per cent experiencing name-calling to 54 per cent experiencing wolf-whistling.

Twenty three per cent said they had been victims of groping or unwanted physical contact of a sexual nature.

The findings were published by ActionAid as its ambassadors Imelda Staunton and Jodie Whittaker opened an exhibition at Marble Arch to highlight the plight of victims worldwide.

It found 36 per cent of women felt at risk of harassment on public transport in UK cities, rising to 51 per cent among the 128 London women who took part.”

Metro, “Tackling street harassment at the Clothespin can be the first step to Philly seriously addressing it“

“I normally wear headphones when I get off at the 15th and Market station – also known as the Clothespin – to avoid the hustle and bustle of the city. This week, I forgot them and was reminded of how much I was missing as a result.

Coming up the steps from the SEPTA station underground, I see a crowd of men hover around the entrance. Smoke can be seen surrounding the outskirts as a group of women are walking up. One by one, the men begin to catcall at them and each time the women try to avoid them like the plague.

One of the men proceeded to call them a bitch when none of the women responds. It was in that moment that I simply asked the men to “knock it off.” What followed were a few verbal homophobic jabs at my masculinity and physical intimidation. While this was going on, several other men just walked by.

The biggest disappointment is that this should have been their concern as well.”

Independent, “Iranian women cut their hair off and dress as men to avoid morality police“

“Women in Iran are cutting their hair short and dressing as men in a bid to bypass state ‘morality’ police who rigorously enforce penalties for not wearing a hijab.

A number of women have shared photos of themselves in public with their hair uncovered on Instagram and other social media.”

NYT Live, “ISIS is fining women $10 for showing their eyes“

“Women, a group that’s especially abused by the terror extremists (a fact that hasn’t prevented the group from somehow having a strange allure with some Western women), have been subjected to some of the new taxes and fines. For instance, ISIS will fine women $10 for showing their eyes. Women who wear a cloak that’s too tight will be hit with a $25 fine, and not wearing socks or gloves will cost them $30 in fines.”

News Australia, “Why this man will never catcall another woman after living in Thailand“

“HAVING travelled around Thailand for the past few years, 28-year-old Australian Dylan* has plenty of amusing stories from his travels; many of which include him being followed and propositioned by gay men.

Surprisingly, he says it’s something that has taught him a lot about the experiences of women.

“In Australia, it’s kind of unusual for a guy to have these experiences, but it’s pretty normal in Australian culture for guys to do that [to women],” he said…

“I now understand why, in Australia, if I look at a girl and smile they often just look away. I used to think, ‘that girl is so bitchy, just give me a smile, it’s not that hard,’” he admits.

“But now I realise, she’s probably had 10 guys smile at her before me, and ask for her number or tell her she’s sexy; so when I smile she thinks, ‘Oh here we go again’.

“I’m sort of grateful for the experiences I’ve had, because I can really sympathise with girls now.”

Mini IOL, “Gender activists take on SA taxi drivers“

“Members of the NGO ActionAid South Africa spoke to taxi drivers, staged two street theatre performances and painted a mural on the inside of the taxi rank….
 
Matshidiso Mofokeng, a member of community-based LGBTI group Vosloo Activators, said women and those who identify as LGBTI face similar challenges when using public transport.
 
“As women, we face so many challenges because we live in a patriarchal society,” Mofokeng said. “As a black lesbian who uses public transport, you find that taxi drivers are very homophobic. Today we are here to say enough is enough of gender-based violence.”

TeleSur, “Mexico City Ridiculed for Sexual Harassment Fight With Whistles“

In light of a surge in street harassment and sexual assaults against women, Miguel Mancera, head of the government of Mexico City, announced that his administration will distribute whistles to women to alert bystanders and police of a possible threat.

The proposal quickly became the subject of ridicule on social media. The hashtag #ElPitoDeMancera became a trending topic. In Spanish, “pito” has a double meaning, suggesting a double entendre.”

Quartz, “Just call the rapist ‘brother’ or use this whistle: The ridiculous ways powerful men globally suggest women fight rape“

“Aside from being ludicrous, those kinds of policies ignore the heart of the problem, which is that sexual harassment and assault are learned behaviors, says Holly Kearl, founder of non-profit Stop Street Harassment. Officials should focus on educating school children that such conduct is not OK, and stop the portrayal of women as sexual objects in the media, Kearl says.”

The Star, “Sheffield branch of Woman’s Equality Party launches Safer Streets campaign“

“Sheffield branch founder member Charlie Barker said: “Following on from the #WEcount campaign, which started in London, it was very clear that street harassment was an issue our members and the public wanted us to tackle.

“WE believes that equality is an issue that effects everyone, regardless of gender and this is reflected in the growing number of male and female members and supporters across the country.

“The Sheffield branch of WE currently hosts around 100 members and 300 registered supporters, who’ve been working hard to put together our Safer Streets campaign.”

Georgia State University, “African-American Girls in High-Risk Neighborhoods Experience Threats and Objectification, Study Finds“

“The girls described witnessing marital aggression, experiencing physical and sexual abuse at the hands of adult family members and facing peer aggression, such as bullying, teasing and physical encounters. They reported feeling unsafe inside and outside their home, as well as participating in risk-taking behaviors that elevate the probability of harm. They frequently described early sexual experiences (occurring prior to age 14), being pressured for sex by older boys and watching pornography with boys.”

The Guardian, “#SayHerName: why Kimberlé Crenshaw is fighting for forgotten women“

“When she speaks at public meetings, Professor Kimberlé Crenshaw has a trick. She asks everyone to stand up until they hear an unfamiliar name. She then reads the names of unarmed black men and boys whose deaths ignited the Black Lives Matter movement; names such as Eric Garner, Michael Brown, Tamir Rice, Freddie Gray, Trayvon Martin. Her audience are informed and interested in civil rights so “virtually no one will sit down”, Crenshaw says approvingly. “Then I say the names of Natasha McKenna, Tanisha Anderson, Michelle Cusseaux, Aura Rosser, Maya Hall. By the time I get to the third name, almost everyone has sat down. By the fifth, the only people standing are those working on our campaign.”

The campaign, #SayHerName, was created to raise awareness about the number of women and girls that are killed by law enforcement officers. For Crenshaw – who coined the term “intersectionality” in the 1980s to describe the way different forms of discrimination overlap and compound each other – it is a brutal illustration of how racism and sexism play out on black women’s bodies.”

Huffington Post, “DC Metro Rape Highlights Why Women Are Always Aware of Rape“

“What it does mean is that girls’ socialization is significantly pegged to cultivated rape and rape myths, in ways that boys’ are not and that that socialization has far-reaching inhibitory social effects. For example, in the wake of this DC rape, chances are that the parents of girls are being far more restrictive about their using public transportation than the parents of boys, especially straight boys. Boys, even if they are not taught to restrict themselves, or subject to evergreen risks, are actually made more vulnerable as a result. This is one of the ways that patriarchy backfires on men.

If people abhor rape and would like to make the world a safer place in general, a good simple first step is listening to women when they say that street harassment is a problem.”

Verily, “This Research Reveals the Real Side Effects of Sexting, Harassment, and Self-Objectification“

Orenstein’s book adds more shocking stats to the mix. “I interviewed more than seventy young women between the ages of 15 and 20,” Orenstein explains, and later adds, “Fully half of the girls had experienced something along a spectrum of coercion to rape…. Only two had previously told another adult what had happened.”

Huffington Post, “What I Wish Men Knew About That Creepy Guy At Starbucks“

“None of these incidents are the worst things that have ever happened, by any means. But put together, they’re indicative of a culture that allows men to feel entitled to women’s bodies. One that leads to men attacking, and even killing women for rejecting them.

Here’s the thing: Women know with no uncertainty that a pass from a powerful man is never just that, a direction to “smile” from a stranger is never just that, and that eyes following us down a sidewalk could become more than just that in a moment. Starbucks man was no exception. He was the rule.”

The Daily Northwestern, “Anxiety Abroad: Students call for better resources navigating sexual harassment, mental health issues on study abroad programs“

Revelist, “12 women reveal the good, bad and downright kickass ways they respond to street harassment“

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment

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