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Harassers attack anti-sexual assault protest at Tahrir Square in Egypt

June 9, 2012 By HKearl

Image by Emad karim

Following yet another huge group of men sexually assaulting a woman at Tahrir Square in Egypt this week, yesterday a group of about 50 women and their male allies took to the Square in protest. Unfortunately, soon after they arrived, they were harassed and attacked, some women were cornered and groped, and they had to flee for their safety.

Thanks for proving the point, harassers. Tahrir Square, like so many public places, is not safe for women. That makes me so angry.

Via ABC News:

“After Friday’s attack, many were already calling for another, much larger stand in the square against such assaults.

Another participant in Friday’s march, Ahmed Hawary, said a close female friend of his was attacked by a mob of men in Tahrir Square in January. She was rushed off in an ambulance, which was the only way to get her out, he said. After suffering from a nervous breakdown, she left Cairo altogether to work elsewhere in Egypt.

“Women activists are at the core of the revolution,” Hawary said. “They are the courage of this movement. If you break them, you break the spirit of the revolution.”


There’s a lot of media coverage of the protest, and I’ll have a better post up here about it tomorrow. I’m interviewing a few women who were there for a Ms. magazine blog post and will cross-post it here.

In the meantime, you can also see the conversation about what happened and the issue overall on the event Facebook page and on twitter, follow the #EndSH stream.

 

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Filed Under: street harassment Tagged With: sexual harasment, street harassment, Tahrir Square

UK workmen may lose job over street harassment

June 4, 2012 By HKearl

A few workmen in the UK may lose their job after harassing multiple women outside the Stoke Newington railway station.

Via the Hackney Gazette:

“Women using the station, and those passing by, have had to run the gauntlet of obscene cat calls and sexually suggestive gestures during the recent warm weather.

Network Rail bosses are believed to have suspended their contract with the company carrying out the work on the station’s forecourt in Stoke Newington High Street, and both have launched investigations…

Shocked commuter John Park, 29, contacted the Gazette after witnessing a woman of south east Asian descent targeted by about 10 Hall Bros Groundwork Ltd workmen, who made sexual and racist remarks.

‘As she bravely walked through this rabble, one workman lunged towards her and mimed a sexual attack when her back was turned,” he said. “We all know wolf-whistling goes on but I’d never seen anything approaching this level of abuse by workmen.’

The following day, an off-duty Gazette photographer was abused.

‘They were leering at me and thrusting their hips. It was awful.’ said Carmen Valino, 31.

A third victim, Ivana Iados, 32, a gallery assistant, claimed the wokmen made suggestive remarks.”

I’m glad to see the workmen’s company and the Network Rail take these complaints seriously and launch an investigation.

Related, last summer, two workmen in the UK were suspended from their job for harassing a woman walking by.

It’s laudable to see companies that take these issues seriously. Hopefully it will deter future incidents of harassment.

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Filed Under: street harassment Tagged With: Stoke Newington railway station, street harassment, UK

Street harassment and running – ESPN article

May 22, 2012 By HKearl

I’m on vacation without a laptop and trying to blog from a smart phone! So this will be short and light on embedded links.

ESPNW published an article today about street harassment and running and features some of my experiences (though a few facts were mixed up). It was in large part my harassment experiences while running that led me to start my activism work.

Harassment while running or exercising outside is sadly common, especially for women. When I surveyed over 800 women for my book, nearly one in four said they exercised at a gym instead of outside to avoid harassers on at least a monthly basis. This is not okay. We should have the right to exercise wherever we want without experiencing harassment!!

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Filed Under: News stories, street harassment Tagged With: ESPN, running, street harassment

NYTimes interview with director of anti-street harassment film

May 22, 2012 By HKearl

The director Mohamed Diab discusses his feminist drama “Cairo 678,” about sexual harassment in Egypt. Only by stabbing harassing men in the groin do the men start paying attention.

 

 

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Filed Under: male perspective, street harassment Tagged With: 678 film, Egypt, HarassMap, Mohamed Diab, sexual harassment, street harassment

SlutWalk Toronto – Year Two

May 21, 2012 By HKearl

Last year, activists in Toronto, Canada, organized a “SlutWalk” of protest after a police officer suggested to college women that they wouldn’t be victimized if they didn’t dress like sluts. The anti-victim-blaming focus touched a nerve worldwide and dozens of SlutWalks have taken place in major cities and on college campuses since then.

On Friday, SlutWalk Toronto will host their second walk. From their website:

“The prevalence of this attitude in our culture at large drew many to this cause to end blaming victims of sexual violence, and judging peoples’ worth by their bodies and what they do with them. In the last year, this fight has spread to over 200 cities around the world, where independent organizers have organized locally-driven SlutWalks and SlutWalk-inspired events. SlutWalk started, and is still going, because we and so many others around the world have had enough.

We demand our bodies and all bodies be respected. Our worth as human beings is not determined by our sexuality.

No matter what I wear
No matter what I look like
No matter what my gender expression is
No matter how much, how little or what kind of sex I have

No matter what I’ve done before
No matter where I come from
No matter how my body has been ‘devalued’ by others
No matter what I’ve been called

MY BODY IS NOT AN INSULT.

We invite you to join us on Friday May 25, 2012, as we take up space and fight for our right to live free of violence, victim-blaming and sex-shaming. We invite people of all gender expressions and orientations, all walks of life, levels of employment and education, all races, ages, abilities, and backgrounds, from all points of this city and elsewhere to come as you are, dressed as you feel comfortable.

UPDATE and MORE INFO

Due to availability of public space in Toronto, we are having a slight shift in time and date. Instead of the originally planned Saturday afternoon on May 26, come out and meet us on Friday May 25, early evening. We’ll be meeting at 5pm at Nathan Phillips Square. The rally will start walking at 5:30 sharp up University Ave. to Queen’s Park. Speakers will be at Queen’s Park between 6:30 and 7pm, finishing up before 8 p.m.Participants are welcome to meet at Queen’s Park and not Nathan Phillips Square if this is a more accessible option for anyone present. Volunteer marshals will be at Queen’s Park, south of the legislative building for this option.

We look forward to seeing you all there, and will have more details about speakers and route specifics to share as they become available.

If you’d like to volunteer and help out with SWTO 2012, we’d love to have you.”

Best of luck to them on SlutWalk year #2!

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Filed Under: Events Tagged With: sexual violence, slut, slutwalk toronto, street harassment, victim blaming

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