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A Woman is Murdered in Trinidad, the Mayor Blames Her

February 13, 2016 By HKearl

Trigger Warning – Rape and Murder

Asami Nagakiya, a 30-year-old Japanese professional musician. Image via Change.org

Tragically this week, Asami Nagakiya, a Japanese women who attended the Trinidad Carnival celebration as a professional musician, was murdered — and likely raped. Now there’s a petition you can sign calling for the local mayor’s resignation after he blamed HER for it.

Via the Washington Post:

“‘She had a laceration on her elbow and black and blue marks on her waist,’ Adams told reporters. ‘It look like a rape/murder to me.’

Authorities released an autopsy report Thursday stating that Nagakiya had been strangled, according to television station CNC. They have not commented on the suspicion that Nagakiya was sexually assaulted.”

To make matters worse, the local mayor blamed HER for her own death.

Also via WaPo:

“‘You know before Carnival I did make a comment about vulgarity and lewdness,’ Raymond Tim Kee said during a Wednesday press conference, according to local media station Loop. ‘The woman has the responsibility to ensure that [she is] not abused.’

Kee’s cringe-worthy comments kept getting worse, as he tried to link the Japanese musician’s killing to Carnival culture.

‘And my argument was you could enjoy Carnival without going through that routine … of prancing and partying,’ he asked. ‘Then why you can’t continue with that and maintain some kind of dignity?’

‘You have to let your imagination roll a bit and figure out was there any evidence of resistance or did alcohol control?’ he told reporters. ‘Therefore involuntary actions were engaged in, and so on ….

‘It’s a matter of, if she was still in her costume – I think that’s what I heard – let your imagination roll,’ he added, before casting the killing less as an outrageous crime than as an ’embarrassment’ for the city.”

Fortunately, there has been huge outcry over his comments.

“Within hours, a woman had launched an online petition calling for Kee’s resignation. By early Friday morning, it had gathered nearly 7,000 signatures. (That equates to roughly 10 percent of the population of Port of Spain.)

‘Victim shaming is an irresponsible thing for anyone to do, far less a leader in a society,’ wrote Rhoda Bharath, a St Augustine resident who signed the petition. ‘[The] Mayor has shown himself to be both insensitive, preemptive and ignorant. He must go.’

‘Tim Kee is an example of everything wrong with leadership in this country,’ added Ryan Ramoutar, a signatory from Point Fortin. ‘His thinking is archaic and his opinion essentially exonerates the perpetrators of any responsibility. He has, effectively, endorsed murder.'”

Our thoughts go out to her family and friends and hope there will be justice for her death. And we applaud everyone who is calling out the outrageous victim-blaming!

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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: Asami Nagakiya, mayor, murder, rape, trinidad, victim blaming

Second Street Harassment-Related Death This Month

January 24, 2016 By HKearl

Image via http://rollingout.com
Image via http://rollingout.com

On Friday in Pittsburgh, Charles McKinney attempted to talk to Janese Talton-Jackson at a bar. News reports say that when she turned him down and left the bar, he followed her and shot her in the chest, killing her. He has since been arrested.

Our thoughts go out to her family and friends. This never should have happened.

Her death happened just three weeks after a man shot and killed Texan Sara Mutschlechner after one of her friends in her car told the man and his friends that their derogatory and sexual comments were offensive.

Both women were in their 20s, with their whole lives ahead of them. That they died in this senseless, needless way is both infuriating and sad.

At what point do we say, enough? At what point do we as a society vow to take this issue seriously?

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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: murder, pittsburgh, Talton-Jackson

Protests Held for Murdered Woman & Her Alleged Murderer is Arrested

September 27, 2012 By HKearl

Protest outside the Presidential Palace. Image via Imprint Movement

Last week, a street harasser in Egypt murdered a 16-year-old woman after she stood up to him. Outraged, students at the nearby Assiut University held a protest in her memory.

Via the Daily News Egypt:

“Mustafa is not the victim of her harasser and murderer, but the victim of an entire society which blacklists any girl who stands up and defends herself against harassment as shameless” [medical student Mo’men Assem] Hassan said, explaining the protest was also to send a message to college girls that they should defend themselves the way Mustafa did.

“This is more than just a harassment case, or even a murder case” Hassan said “it’s about a village girl, neither a political activist nor informed of human rights, yet determined to resist the harasser.”

According to Hassan, there are now calls for a march to be held on 14 October, demanding an anti-harassment law.”

A few days ago, police arrested the alleged killer. He denied harassing her and claimed she spat at him for no reason and that he fired a “shot at the wall,” not at her. Yeah right. How come she’s dead?!

Daily News Egypt reports:

“Assiut security director, Major General Mohamed Ibrahim, said an automatic rifle and ammunition were found with Nassar upon his arrest near a mountainous area, according to independent daily Al-Masry Al-Youm. The investigation also revealed Nassar had previously been accused of murder, attempted murder, and resisting authorities.”

How is he still free to walk around murdering more people?! Our legal systems outrage me.

A lot of people agree. On Sunday, there was a protest outside the Presidential Palace, decrying the woman’s murder and calling for stricter harassment laws. It was co-organized by Basma and Nefsi.

The Egyptian Independent reports:

“About two dozen protesters lined the sidewalk along the main boulevard at rush hour, holding signs bearing messages such as ‘I don’t want to be afraid when I walk in the streets,’ and ‘Morsy, Morsy, where are you?’ in reference to President Mohamed Morsy. Basma has also organized patrols in metro stations to identify sexual harassers and report them to police.”

I am continually inspired by Egyptian activists who simply won’t give up and protest, patrol, and creatively address street harassment every week. I am confident that one day, they will succeed.

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment Tagged With: Egypt, morsy, murder

Egyptian Street Harasser Murders Woman

September 18, 2012 By HKearl

Trigger Warning —

In rare instances, street harassment ends in murder (here are a few examples) and sadly, that is what recently happened in Egypt. The Egyptian Centre for Women’s Rights just released this press release about it:

“The Egyptian Center for Women’s Rights (ECWR) strongly condemns the horrible accident murder of a young lady who is 20 years old in Assuit via an Automatic rifle. The incident began when “Iman Mostafa Mohamed” was walking in the village’s main street with her friend, then she felt that someone touched part of her body that is considered a sexual assault, so she spit on his face and insulted him and said: “I will get my rights back..I will get my rights back against your will.”

Therefore, he pushed her to the ground and kicked her; then he shot her before she rises and she died in a matter of few minutes. This is terrible crime happened within the increase of sexual harassment which is considered a cancer that should be treated as soon as possible.

Based upon ECWR’s close monitoring of the phenomenon and noting the increase in the percentage of sexual harassment crimes, ECWR sent a law draft to President Mohamed Morsy on Monday 27 August 2012 in order for him to adopt the law draft of criminalizing sexual harassment for the year 2012 by amending the No.58 of 1937 and no response was received. Additionally, the law draft was sent several times to the elected councils with no response as well.

It should be noted that the law draft was developed through continuous efforts for three years on behalf of the legal personnel, security personnel, civil society representatives and activists. This law draft was developed based on two studies; the first, “sexual harassment is a social cancer” where the sample of 3000 women mentioned that they were harassed at least once before.

As per the second, “Clouds in Egypt’s Sky” of 50% women and 50% men sample where 83% of the Egyptian women said that they were harassed and 63% of the Egyptian men mentioned that they sexually harassed at least one time before.

This is a serious indicator concerning women’s safety in the streets, as this phenomenon of sexual harassment is leading to murder crimes.

Consequently, the Egyptian Center for Women’s Rights ECWR demands voluntarily defending the victim and asking the state to take the necessary and strict procedures by:

Fair and quick trial of the murderer, so that the Egypt’s streets shall not turn into a violent environment like street wars.

Passing the suggested law of sexual harassment that was sent before to President Mohamed Morsy in order to adopt it as part of his legislative authorities that were passed to him due to the absence of the legislative council.”

It’s horrible that she was murdered simply for standing up for herself. What a terrible, senseless end to her young life.

Her story shows the seriousness of street harassment and it illustrates how a woman can never be sure what kind of reaction will escalate the situation. Maybe in another situation, her response would have scared or embarrassed the harasser and caused him to leave or apologize. The onus really should not be on women to have to figure out in a split second what will be the “best” response, the one that will keep them from getting spit on, chased, called a “bitch,” assaulted or murdered. (And for those who may say, well her angry response provoked him, first that is victim-blaming and second, other murders by street harassers have occurred when the woman ignored them!) The onus should be on men to not harass and on bystanders and society at large to work on prevention efforts and hold harassers accountable.

Until there is a cultural shift so that street harassment is no longer dismissed, trivialized, or blamed on the harassed person, street harassment will continue. Will a law criminalizing it help spur a cultural shift? Maybe. But Egypt’s political landscape is unstable so it seems unlikely it will be enforced. I would bet that the citizens who are taking it upon themselves to patrol for harassers will have more of an impact right now than an unenforced law.

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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: Egyptian Centre for Women's Rights, murder, street harassment

Trayvon Martin: The streets should be safe for everyone.

March 21, 2012 By HKearl

Image via USA Today

The tragic and outrageous killing of 17-year-old Trayvon Martin by a Neighborhood Watch leader in Florida because he looked “suspicious” has become national news. Martin was unarmed, carrying snacks from a local convenience store, dressed like many teenagers dress: in a hoodie. What made him suspicious seems to be that he was black. George Zimmerman, the Neighborhood Watch leader, has not been charged with a crime because he says he was acting in self-defense, despite the mounting evidence showing Martin was not a threat at all.

Via USA Today:

“The case has resonated for many who say Martin died because of stereotypes of young black men as violent criminals. The shooting is already being compared with high-profile and historic civil rights cases — for instance, a doctored photograph has circulated throughout many social media sites that compares Martin to Emmett Till, a young man lynched by white men in 1950s Mississippi.

“It’s not about these individual acts of racism,” said Mark Neal, a professor of African and African American Studies at Duke University. “It’s about the way that black males are framed in the larger culture … as being violent, criminal and threats to safety and property.”

The tragic case played out in Sanford, population 54,000, about 30 minutes north of Orlando, when Martin left his father’s home to buy candy and iced tea for his little brother at a nearby 7-Eleven…

The fatal shooting touched a chord of community outrage in Sanford on Tuesday night. The killing was “a senseless murder as far as we are concerned,” Seminole County NAACP President Clayton Turner told a capacity crowd at the start of a town-hall-style meeting at Allen Chapel AME Church.

Clayton said the Sanford city manager and mayor were unable to attend because they had been “summoned” to Washington by Attorney General Eric Holder.

“The line has been drawn in the sand,” Clayton said. “We as people of color are going to stand our ground. We are going to do it in a non-violent way, and we are going to prevail.”

Before his son’s death, Tracy Martin warned son Trayvon that being a black man in America could be dangerous.

“I’ve always let him know we as African Americans get stereotyped,” Tracy Martin told USA TODAY. “I told him that society is cruel.”

As I often say and write, people are harassed – and killed – on the streets for all kinds of reasons: racism, homophobia, transphobia, classism, xenophobia, ablism, and sexism. And too often they are harassed for a combination of those reasons. Martin’s death is a very, very sad example of the racial harassment and profiling that still occurs.

While this site focuses on harassment motivated by gender, that harassment does not happen in isolation. The issues are complex and often inter-related. And the streets should be safe for everyone.

If you’re on twitter, join the Women’s Media Center #SheParty chat today, 3-5 p.m. EST. Martin’s death, racial profiling, harassment of men of color by police and how these topics intersect with gender-based street harassment will be one of the topics of conversation.

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Filed Under: anti-street harassment week, News stories Tagged With: murder, street harassment, Trayvon Martin

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