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Snapshot of street harassment stories, news, announcements & tweets: April 29, 2012

April 29, 2012 By HKearl

Read stories, news articles, blog posts, and tweets about street harassment from the past few weeks.

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Street Harassment Stories:

Share your story! You can read street harassment stories on the Web at:

Stop Street Harassment Blog

HarassMap in Egypt

Bijoya in Bangladesh

Resist Harassment in Lebanon

Ramallah Street Watch in Palestine

Name and Shame in Pakistan

Safe Streets in Yemen

Many of the Hollaback sites

In the News, on the Blogs:

* Reuters, “Saudi says men to face jail for harassment in malls“

* Today’s Zaman, “Virtual story-sharing to come to life in İstanbul“

* Boston Herald, “‘She-Hulk’ collars alleged T creep after lewd act“

* All Africa.com, “Uganda: Naked Women Protest Alleged Sexual Harassment“

* The Times of India, “New map to make travel safe for women“

* Ground Report, “Walk for Respect -Against eve teasing and sexual harassment“

* TransProviser, “An encounter on the street in Any-City USA“

* The Daily Iowan, “UI, Iowa City communities marches to raise awareness of sexual assault“

* Geek Feminism, “Ways for men to respond to harassment of women“

* Bird of Paradox, “Inner City Life“

* Yoruba Girl Dancing, “The Day I Got Kicked In The Street“

* DNA Info, “Man Arrested for Allegedly Touching Himself on L Train“

* Frankly Rebekah, “My Feelings on Street Harassment“

* The Times of India, “Helpline & night patrolling to curb eve-teasing“

* For-The-Masses, “Campaign Waged Against Street Harassment“

* The Atlantic Wire, “Can an App Fight Street Harassment?”; CBS New York, “New York City Looks To Battle Catcalling With Smartphone App;” NY Daily News, “Catcalling men targeted by new girl power team of lady pols and Boerum hill blogger maven;” The Village Voice, “Hollaback!’s Anti-Catcall App Gets 20K from City: Some Thoughts“

Activism Announcements:

New:

* Read a report about the events of Anti-Street Harassment Week last month.

* Young Women for Change released two short films about street harassment in Afghanistan

* The Stop Street Harassment book is available in paperback for $15.

* Hollaback launched 8 new sites.

* Thousands of people rallied for safe streets in Kannur, India

Reminders:

* Submit art about street harassment for the VoiceTool Product exhibit in San Francisco, CA

* If you’re in the New York City area, take this survey about harassment on public transportation.

* Gay and bisexual men, take this survey about street harassment (you can be in any location).

* The Adventures of Salwa campaign has a hotline for sexual harassment cases in Lebanon: 76-676862.

* In Bangalore, India, there is a helpline for street harassment 080 – 22943225 / 22864023

* Report #streetharassment in Pakistan at @NameAndShamePk, email nameandshame@ryse.pk, SMS 0314-800-35-68 or online at http://www.nameandshame.pk

10 Tweets from the Week:

1. @astrojacqs Men! If you think harassing women is wrong, make this clear to your male friends who don’t. You know who they are. #streetharassment

2. @selise3 Arguing with my father about street harassment, because in his opinion “it doesn’t happen.” Only it happens to me every single day.

3. @MaduduzoR My name is not ‘Sexy/baby’ &no I don’t want you to walk me home #streetharassment

4. @IsheetaM My Captain America t-shirt seems to have invited a lot more #streetharassment than usual. I must be missing something. #WhatWouldSteveDo

5.‏ @NazNabeeh #Efsha5mota7aresh girl asked to be anonymous told me she was touched by passing man so she chased him for 20mins till she got him. #EndSH

‏6. @toryhipster it suggests women like street harassment deep down. UM NO WE FUCKING DON’T. IT’S HUMILIATING. IT’S ONE OF THE MOST DEGRADING EXPERIENCES OUT

7. @pixiecita The idea that all women’s bodies are “fair game” is seen in action via street harassment, I think.

8. @REVOfucknLUTION: street harassment level in my community is ridiculous. I can’t walk to the store alone without being verbally accosted”

9. @TheLittleModel I am Not, NOT! Going to Let #Street #Harassment Ruin My Day! Some Shit is Just Sickeningly Out Of Line

10. @SocialJerkBlog I’m such a bitch. Why can’t I take getting followed by strangers as a compliment? #streetharassment #Ienjoybeingagirl

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Filed Under: hollaback, News stories, Stories, street harassment, weekly round up

Thousands rally in Kannur, India, for safe streets

April 27, 2012 By Contributor

This guest blog post is by Maya, a PhD student in Barcelona, Spain, who is from India.

This newspaper article is from Kannur, a district in Kerala, India. The ladies gathered in the city center to ask for the rights for sharing the city at night. The ladies did a group painting in a large canvas which gave out messages that everywhere women face the same kind of problems, especially in the streets while traveling at night. They held this gathering in order to demand their right to travel safe at nights.

There was a protest and rally, where they held lit candles, it lasted almost till day break and they rallied through the city. Thousands of women joined in the rally.

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment

Exposing a stalker

April 25, 2012 By HKearl

Ariane Friedrich - Image via Zimbio

After a man allegedly sent her sexually explicit photographs online, Ariane Friedrich, a German high jumper who expects to compete in this summer’s Olympics, decided to publicly shame him.

Via Yahoo News:

“I’ve been offended in the past, sexually harassed and I’ve had a stalker before,” she wrote in a recent Facebook post that included the name and email address of a man who she says sent her explicit messages and pictures of his genitals. “It’s time to act, it’s time to defend myself. And that’s what I’m doing.”

German authorities are now investigating the matter, according to Friedrich’s manager. The matter has touched off an intense national debate on privacy with Friedrich, who is trained as a police officer, at the forefront…

“The removal of anonymity is a means to clarify,” she wrote in a statement translated from German. “Just think of all the children, young people and adults who are secretly harassed by perverts and don’t know what to do or how to defend themselves. Should we not go forward as a good example and demonstrate strength?”

German newspapers have asked whether Friedrich had a legal right to publicly disclose the man’s name. In that country, names of offenders aren’t disclosed in the media.”

Via the New York Times:

“As Niko Härting, a lawyer specializing in media and Internet law, points out, the legality of the issue hinges on the question of whether the man named by Ms. Friedrich, who has become a public personality in Germany since placing seventh in the 2008 Olympics in Beijing, actually wrote and sent her the message.

“It all hangs on one question: Is it true or false?” Mr. Härting said. “If it is true, then she is allowed to post it.”

Why would she make this up? And surely she has copies of the photos. It always makes me feel like the people who protest this have something to hide. Like the people who are upset when we call out harassers. Why would anyone be upset about that, unless they’re harassers?!

It took a lot of guts to disclose the name of this man who is harassing her and guess what, I bet he doesn’t harass her or anyone else in this way again. And it may put other would-be stalkers on notice.

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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: Ariane Friedrich, harassment, online stalker

She-Hulk mode — “I’ve had enough of being harassed on the street”

April 24, 2012 By HKearl

Photo by Mark Garfinkel, via the Boston Herald

In Boston, a young woman would not let a public masturbator intimidate her during her trolley ride home from work. Instead she called him out and got him arrested.

Via the Boston Herald:

“This guy was just being a real creeper,” she said. As she shuffled along the train, he followed her. She zoned out, listening to music, only to look up and see him standing over her.

“I looked up and felt awkward, so I looked down,” she said. She said the man was exposing and touching himself, but tried to cover himself with his shirt.

The woman — not someone to meekly let an alleged creep get away with it — shouted out what he was doing, but no one stepped in to help. She said one male passenger even shrugged. So, she said, she went into “She-Hulk” mode, lunging as the man tried to bolt at Packard’s Corner in Brighton.

She said she held the man with one hand and “berated” him while she waited for the cops to arrive. She said he looked frightened.

“He kept saying sorry, but he was just sorry for himself,” she said.

The man told transit cops that the “packed and jostling” trolley caused his shorts to fall, according to a police report. He told police that he was unaware he was exposed until the woman started screaming.

T cops charged Michael Galvin, 37, of Somerville with open and gross lewdness. He was released on his own recognizance and ordered to stay off the T.

The woman said she acted because, “I’ve had enough of being harassed on the street. I’m tired of it and I want it to end. It was the last straw.”

She also had some choice words for the people who stood by and did nothing on the train: “That’s appalling. That makes me so angry. I want everyone to know that they have to say something.”

Her courage and determination are commendable. Hopefully that man will think twice before masturbating on a trolley. Her story reminds me of the amazing Nicola Briggs in New York City who did something similar when a man exposed himself to her on the subway.
When we feel safe and have the time, engaging in public shaming can be a very effective way to stop a harasser.

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Filed Under: News stories, Stories, street harassment

“The veil would never protect anybody from getting harassed, not even niqab. As long as they [men] know that under that niqab or under that veil, there is a woman, they will sexually harass you”

April 22, 2012 By HKearl

Via Tunisia Live

This is a really great, thorough article about street harassment in Tunisia. I’m including an excerpt and encourage you to read it in its entirety.

Via Tunisia Live:

“…With a progressive Code of Personal Status, Tunisia is commonly regarded as the Arab world’s most advanced country in terms of women’s rights. Yet sexual harassment exists in Tunisia, too. Unlike in Egypt, sexual harassment has not entered the arena of public discourse in Tunisia, and is often dismissed as a non-issue.

A recent survey conducted by the Tunisian National Office of Population and Family (ONFP) found that physical violence against women was most commonplace, followed by psychological violence, sexual violence and last, economic violence. While the survey found that violence against women was most common in the private sphere, it also revealed that violence against women in the public sphere is sexual in 21.3% of cases, psychological in 14.8%, and physical in 9.8%.

Sexual harassment is not just physical – but includes gestural, and even verbal, harassment. According to UN Women, sexual harassment can be, “making sexual gestures with hands or through body movements,” “hanging around a person,” “sexual comments,” or “unwanted sexual looks or gestures” – not to mention rape, pressure for sexual favors, etc.

For Meriem Manar (whose name has been changed to protect her identity), a student of business and English in Tunis, sexual harassment is a daily reality. “You cannot avoid it. Men are in the street with you, and you have to go to school, you have to go to work. Because it is in our daily life, because it is our every day experience, we end up accepting it. You leave your house mentally prepared. You just deal with it,” she said.

But this comes at a certain price to her liberty. “There are places that I cannot go alone, like parks…because I know I might be not just sexually harassed, but even raped…If you walk on Avenue Habib Bourguiba at night, you will not find a single female on the street. If you are alone at night and walking in the street, and somebody sees you, they will have the idea that you are going to a nightclub, or that you are meeting your boyfriend…that you are doing something your family would not be proud of.”

For Meriem, taking public transportation can often become unbearable. The everyday hassle of public transport turns into a nightmare for women in Tunis – regardless of their age, and their dress. “The veil would never protect anybody from getting harassed, not even niqab. As long as they [men] know that under that niqab or under that veil, there is a woman, they will sexually harass you,” says Manar. While no statistics exist for Tunisia, a study conducted by the Egyptian Center for Women’s Rights, in conjunction with the United Nations Population Fund and the European Commission, found that in Egypt, 72.5% of surveyed victims of sexual harassment were veiled.

Meriem yearns for a car reserved for women, like in the Cairo metro. But according to Chiao, segregation is not the answer. “I ride in the women’s car. But I think that as a policy or a solution, it establishes very bad norms. It promotes this idea that if a woman is riding in the men’s car, then she is looking for harassment, or that she brought it unto herself.”

The Legislation

Since 2004, sexual harassment has been punishable by law in Tunisia – with one year in prison and a fee of 3,000 dinars. Halima Jouini, a founding-member of the Tunisian Association of Democratic Women (ATFD) and a volunteer at the Center for Listening and Orientation of Women Victims of Violence, qualified this law as “limited” and “incriminating” for women.

“We launched this law in 2003…it was the ATFD that led the campaign. It was relatively successful – for the first time, sexual harassment was recognized as a crime. But still we are not satisfied – the law does not protect women,” she said.

At the time of the interview, Jouini was just returning from the tribunal in Tunis, where she had been defending the case of a rape victim. The woman in question was a housekeeper, who had been raped – sodomized, in fact – repetitively by her male boss. Upon confessing this to his wife, the housekeeper agreed to film the crime as evidence to take the man to court. But once this evidence was obtained, the wife pressed charges against both her husband and the housekeeper for adultery. The man, who possessed a Canadian passport, fled the country, leaving the housekeeper in prison – where she had been held for a month as of late March.

According to Jouini, the 2004 law’s definition of sexual harassment is limited in scope – as it delimits sexual harassment as strictly a repeated action. It is currently defined as “persistence in the harassment of the other by repetition of actions, words or gestures.” Citing the case of a woman who quit her job after she was harassed once in the workplace, Jouini pointed out that some women do not put up with the harassment, and choose to put an end to it after the very first occurrence. Jouini further explained that this makes it harder to collect evidence – as it is not always easy to prove that the harassment was repetitive.

The law further provides no protection to the plaintiff and witnesses, but instead explicitly states that if a case is declared nolle prosequi, or if the defendant is acquitted, then the defendant can ask for reparation, and sue the plaintiff for defamation.

Jouini questioned why this was recalled in the body of the law – when this principle underlies all laws included in the Penal Code. “This principle exists for the whole Penal Code, but to recall it in this very article is a way to say, ‘be careful women’…it is incriminating for the plaintiff.”

The Tunisian Association of Democratic Women (ATFD) calls for a comprehensive law on sexual harassment – one that would not only be included in the Penal Code, but also in the Tunisian Labor Code. Jouini pointed out that this was already the case in Morocco. The ATFD is also lobbying to include an article against discrimination and violence in the new Constitution – Jouini added that this has happened in several countries that underwent recent transitions, like South Africa and some Latin American countries.

Last but not least, the law against sexual harassment is couched in a moralizing rhetoric – it claims to discourage the “infringement of good mores and sexual harassment.” According to Jouini, sexual harassment is “a patriarchal discriminatory practice…You can’t justify this by good mores, or the lack of….”

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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: sexual harassment, street harassment, tunisia

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