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Snapshot of Street Harassment Stories, News, Tweets: January 22, 2012

January 23, 2012 By HKearl

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

** Sign up to receive a monthly e-newsletter from Stop Street Harassment ***

Street Harassment Stories:

Share your story! You can read new street harassment stories on the Web from the past week at:

Stop Street Harassment Blog

HarassMap Egypt

Resist Harassment Lebanon

Many of the Hollaback sites

In the News, on the Blogs:

Malwi women protest - image via Bikya Masr

* The Daily Beast, “Egypt’s Game Changers: Samira Ibrahim and the Women Who Speak Up About Sexual Violence“

* Bikya Masr, “Malawi women plan protest for freedom to wear trousers“

* Los Angeles Times, “Sacred Heart High girls go extra mile, but it’s no walk in park“

* New York Times, “Lechery, Immodesty and the Talmud“

* Zeenews, “I don’t need a veil, you do!“

* Hindustan Times, “Keep pepper sprays in hand, police tell Delhi women“

* The Jerusalem Post, “Haredi banned from public transport for sexual harassment“

* Ebony, “Stop Telling Women How to Not Get Raped“

* Feministing.com, “There is no Terminal 3“

* NBC News, “Report: Butt Slasher Arrested in Peru“

* Jamaica Plains Gazette, “Website gives voice to street harassment victims“

Activism Announcements:

New:

* Read a Baltimore, Maryland, college student’s thesis on street harassment

* The Adventures of Salwa in Lebanon launches a new video clip


Reminders:

* Sign the Petition: “Demand Justice for Two Men Killed Trying to Stop Street Harassment“

* View two new anti-street harassment films from Egypt and from Pakistan

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

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

10 Tweets from the Week:

1. silverspeakers Talking about street harassment is important bc it reminds women we’re not alone & clues men in to what goes on & how they should help.

2. nualacabral Walking Home has been accepted to the Women Action Media Fest in Boston, which happens to be scheduled on Anti-#StreetHarassment Day!

3. AmoAmmo “When a woman says ‘get lost’: get lost. Find another one. End of story.” #randomlyfeministcsimiami #streetharassment

4. fight_abuse: Street Harassment: Molestation bid on the road kills two schoolgirls. #stopvaw via @maps4aid fb.me/1w2JstGWh

5. kanaafa Women’s issues have not changed pre or after revolutions – domestic violence, rape, representation in politics #ChangeYourWorldCairo

6. blasianallie Got “hey shawty” twice today. Once on campus. Really? #Streetharassment

7. MartiSladek Young man came up to me in a store and stroked my faux fur coat without asking. Harassment does not happen only on street. He’s sorry now.

8. sallyzohney#egypt has a law against harassment in public places.is it enforced? Is it strong enough? @harassmap #changeyourworldcairo #EndSH

9. aisha1908 A fucking stranger grabbed both of my arms, and said “i love your ass. YOU HEAR ME? I love that ass”

10. aisha1908 What kind of such twisted world is this that I can’t even walk to work without being touched?

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

Rally against rape in Beirut

January 14, 2012 By HKearl

Hundreds of people rallied in Beirut, Lebanon, today to protest rape and sexual harassment and the weak laws against such crimes.

The rally was organized by Nasawiya, a feminist collective that also runs The Adventures of Salwa campaign against street and sexual harassment. View images.

Via The Daily Star:

“Neither marital rape nor domestic violence is currently outlawed in Lebanon, and sexual harassment in the work place is also not criminalized.

Furthermore, according to Article 522 of the Lebanese Criminal Code, if a man rapes a woman, his sentence will be repealed if he marries his victim.

"We have nothing to lose but our chains!"

Farah Salka, of feminist collective Nasawiya, said the current Lebanese laws regarding sexual violence were “archaic” and that the time for change had come.

“We are also asking all police, municipalities, and Parliament to take rape and sexual harassment seriously,” she added. Activists will meet at noon outside the Interior Ministry, and march toward Parliament.”

I applaud them and send strong thoughts of solidarity.

It’s exciting to remember this is just one of several large-scale rallies organized women against sexual violence and harassment. In the past few weeks, thousands of women rallied in Egypt and as did hundreds in Israel.

As the poster above says, “We have nothing to lose but our chains” when people protest their own oppression. Let us all vow to raise our voices and protest oppression, be it our own or be it the oppression of others.

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Filed Under: Activist Interviews, News stories Tagged With: lebanon, Nasawiya, rape laws, sexual violence beirut, street harassment

Dancing toward change in Israel

January 10, 2012 By HKearl

Image via Jerusalem Post

Remember the ultra-Orthodox Jewish men who called an 8-year-old a whore as she walked to school in Israel? That terrible incident illustrates how many men treat girls and women across the country.

In response, on Friday, January 6, a group of 250 women from  Bet Shemesh held a Flashmob in the city square.

“[They] decided to raise their voices against the exclusion of women from the public domain by holding a mass public dance in the city square. The women, residents of the city from all ages and sectors, religious, traditional and secular, gathered together in a flashmob dance, in the city square and started dancing towards a change.” – via YouTube


Via the Jerusalem Post:

“Dance organizer Miri Shalem said that the event was organized in protest of the violent extremist actions of “the group of crazies,” and to show that there is another side to Beit Shemesh. “Today the women and girls demonstrated our unity in public and I hope we will continue to do this in the future in order to improve our city,” she said.”

“We wanted to express our feelings in a unique way and highlight a different face of Beit Shemesh,” said Brenda Ganot, a flashmob organizer and Beit Shemesh resident.

“We love our city and want peaceful coexistence between the different sectors of the population; however, we will not sit quietly and let a group of crazy extremists set the tone for our city.”

Way to go!

(H/T to Hollaback for the link to the video)

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment Tagged With: bet shemesh, street harassment

Snapshot of street harassment stories, news, tweets: January 8, 2012

January 8, 2012 By HKearl

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

** Sign up to receive a monthly e-newsletter from Stop Street Harassment ***

Street Harassment Stories:

Share your story! You can read new street harassment stories on the Web from the past week at:

Stop Street Harassment Blog

HarassMap Egypt

Resist Harassment Lebanon

Many of the Hollaback sites

In the News, on the Blogs:

Photo via WSJ

* The Wall Street Journal, “India Journal: Rethinking Safety in Delhi“

* IOL News, “Miniskirt assault ‘backward, chauvinistic and ugly’” and Sowetan Live, “‘Harassed miniskirt girls’ finally lay charges“

* Mercury News, “East Bay scientist reduces violence against Darfuri women through better cooking technology“

* Mid Day, “The myth of a safe city“

* Deccan Herald, “Delhi police get a call every two seconds“

* The Times of India, “‘Should I wear gloves? Conductors touch my palms‘”

* Boston Globe, “‘Hollaback!’ and help fight street harassment through an online community“

* Trust Law, “Egyptian women vow to persist in demand for rights“

Activism Announcements:

New:

* Sign the Petition: “Demand Justice for Two Men Killed Trying to Stop Street Harassment“

* View two new anti-street harassment films from Egypt and from Pakistan

Reminders:

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

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

* The 5th edition of the prestigious textbook Women: Images & Realities, A Multicultural Anthology is now available. For this printing, they included a few pages about street harassment! (see #143)

10 Tweets from the Week:

1. MLcarlberg Can all dudes decide to not catcall especially at night? Regardless of intent, it’s threatening, never flattering.

2. whereisyvette I like how I got a catcall at the gas station from a guy WHO RODE A BICYCLE THERE. I mean wow, I was gonna fall for him!

3. yashar Street harassment!! RT @lilforeigngirl: @yashar I loved Elmo too. Until I met a creepy Elmo on the streets of NYC who grabbed my hand..

4. No_Bozo #ThingsGuysShouldNOTSayToAnotherGuy “hey lets hit on that Chick!” #FF END #StreetHarrassment @hkearl @HollabackCHD @iHollaback @SlutWalkHK

5. JessaVanSickle I want to meet the woman who positively responds to the ‘catcall’.

6. harassmap While waiting for a bus, watch out for your boobs and bags bit.ly/AnZUYQ #Egypt #harassmap #endSH

7. SawsaGa Have you experienced any #sexualharassment on NYE celebration in Tahrir? #EndSH cc @HarassMap

8. ShaikhRafia March 18-24 is a week for fighting #StreetHarassment internationally? Whoazaa. #IknewIwasBornInAGreatWeek 😀

9. emilyhughes Men who catcall are always the worst, but they’re especially the worst during morning rush hour.

10. MohHKamel Did any of the parliamentary candidates propose a law tht would curb the sexual harassment pandemic in #Egypt as part of his program? #EndSH

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

60 men harass, grope two teenage girls in South Africa

January 4, 2012 By HKearl

2008 Mini-Skirt March in protest of groping - via Siasa Duni's blog

1/5/12 Update: “The two teenagers who were harassed and groped by a group of men near the Noord Street taxi rank last week laid charges of harassment and intimidation at the Johannesburg central police station yesterday.

“The girls said they could remember some of the men who attacked them, so we are hopeful of their prosecution. We don’t need to arrest all the men, we only need a few to make an example,” Matshidiso Mfikoe, a member of the mayoral committee for public safety, said.”

Via IOL News:

“Two teenagers were harassed and groped in public on Friday because one of them wore a miniskirt. The Sowetan newspaper reported on Tuesday that a 17-minute long clip of CCTV footage shows one girl, wearing a black miniskirt, emerging from a shop where a crowd of between 50 and 60 men had gathered. They follow her, groped her and took photos with their cellphones, the Sowetan reported.

She screamed at her tormentors and occasionally tried to punch them as they groped her. When her friend tried to help her she was also abused.

Johannesburg metro police intervened and accompanied the girl in the miniskirt home. A nearby businessman pulled the other into his shop. Metro police arrived a few minutes later and escorted her away.

Gauteng premier Nomvula Mokonyane also condemned the incident.

“We learned with a deep sense of sadness and anger about the abuse of two young women on December 30 last year, because of their clothing,” she said in a statement.

“We condemn in the strongest possible terms the animal-like behaviour of those men involved – some old enough to be the young women’s fathers – where some males went as far as groping the young women.”

Look at this similar story, via a 2008 BBC article:

“Hundreds of South African women have marched to a Johannesburg taxi rank, where a woman was sexually assaulted for wearing a miniskirt. Nwabisa Ngcukana, 25, returned to where she was allegedly attacked by a group of taxi-drivers and street hawkers, who said she was indecently dressed.

“I came here to show the guys that I’m not scared of them – to face my demons,” she told the BBC.

The taxi drivers shouted insults at the women, some of whom wore miniskirts. Some shouted that South African women were being given too many rights….

The authorities have appealed to the taxi-drivers’ association to help find those who allegedly assaulted Ms Ngcukana and other women in recent weeks.

While some South Africans have said it is against local culture for women to wear miniskirts, the National House of Traditional Leaders last week said that women often wore short skirts in traditional ceremonies.”

What chilling behavior and what scary experiences for the young women. The silver lining is the police actually reacted and intervened in the most recent incident, as did a bystander businessman. But what will happen to the harassers and gropers? Do they just get to go on their merry way, ready to harass and grope another young woman the next day? Until there are more prevention efforts and punishments in place, what will change?

And is it time for another miniskirt march?

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment Tagged With: groping, march, miniskirt, south africa, street harassment

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