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Important legislation introduced in Washington, DC

April 17, 2012 By HKearl

L to R: Holly Kearl, Chai Shenoy, Council Member Muriel Bowser, Ben Merrion

YAY!! I’ve got great news. New legislation introduced in Washington, DC, will make it easier for police to take action when a person has committed “the offense of misdemeanor sexual abuse, misdemeanor sexual abuse of a child or minor, or lewd, indecent, or obscene acts.” This applies to the public transportation system and the streets and so if it passes, it’s more likely that a person flashing or engaging in public masturbation will face penalty.

Background: Over the last several weeks, I’ve been part of a team at Collective Action for Safe Spaces pressuring the Washington Metropolitan Area Transportation Authority (WMATA) to do more about sexual harassment and assault on the Washington, DC-area transportation system. We testified in February before the DC City Council, specifically before Ward 4 City Council Member Muriel Bowser. Bowser was very disturbed by the information we shared with her and asked WMATA to address it. Thankfully, WMATA is addressing it.

Early on in our collaboration with WMATA, we found out from transit police that they have limitations in making arrests. For example, verbal sexual harassment, unless it’s a threat, is not a criminal offense (but for the first time, WMATA is finally tracking it to look for patterns, etc) so they cannot do anything about it (this is true most places in the USA and cause for future legislative work). We also found out that since Maryland, Virginia, and Washington, DC, all have varying laws around harassment, the transit police are limited in what they can do. They are bound by the laws of whichever area the crime takes place since the transit system spans all three areas. In Maryland, people who engage in indecent and obscene behavior (public masturbation, flashing) can be arrested without the officer having to witness it occurring. In DC and VA, the police need to witness it occurring (!!!) before they can do anything.

Once we found out about this limitation in the law, we informed Council Member Bowser. She was not aware of this limitation either and she said she’d investigate it. So the good news is she upheld that promise and has introduced legislation to ensure that in Washington, DC, an officer does not have to observe the indecent exposure occurring to take action. As Collective Action for Safe Spaces says, “Although we do NOT support more people getting arrested, we do want Metro to be safe for all, and not have to watch individuals doing obscene things while staring at you.”

The Bill:
______________________
Councilmember Muriel Bowser

A BILL

________

IN THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA

________________________

To amend section 23-581 of the District of Columbia Official Code to enhance enforcement of the indecent exposure law by allowing police officers to arrest suspects without a warrant when officers have probable cause to believe that suspects have committed lewd, indecent, or obscene acts.

BE IT ENACTED BY THE COUNCIL OF THE DISTRICT OF COLUMBIA, That this
act may be cited as the “Sexual Harassment Prevention Act of 2012”.

Sec. 2. Section 23-581 of the District of Columbia Official Code is amended as follows:
(a) Subsection (a-7) (D.C. Official Code § 23-581(a-7)) is amended to read as follows:
“(a-7) A law enforcement officer may arrest a person without a warrant if the officer has probable cause to believe that the person has committed the offense of misdemeanor sexual abuse, misdemeanor sexual abuse of a child or minor, or lewd, indecent, or obscene acts as provided in sections 22-3006, 22-3010.01, and 22-1312.”
Sec. 3. Fiscal impact statement.
The Council adopts the fiscal impact statement of the Budget Director as the fiscal impact statement required by section 602(c)(3) b of the District of Columbia Home Rule Act, approved December 24, 1973 (87 Stat. 813; D.C. Official Code § 1-206.02(c)(3)).
Sec. 4. Effective date.
This act shall take effect following approval by the Mayor (or in the event of veto by the Mayor, action by the Council to override the veto), and a 30-day period of congressional review as provided in Section 602(c)(1) of the District of Columbia Home Rule Act, approved December 24, 1973 (87 Stat. 813; D.C. Official Code §1-206(c)(1)), and publication in the District of Columbia Register.

It’s exciting that the bill will apply to acts that occur off the transit system too — it applies to acts committed anywhere in Washington, DC. If passed, the legislation will give more protection to victims and ensure that perpetrators are more likely to face punishment for their crimes.

The bill has been referred to Council Member Mendelson’s Committee on the Judiciary.  They need to hold a hearing and then vote on it in a separate mark-up hearing.  The full Council then has to vote on it twice to be submitted to the Mayor for signature.

So, there are still several steps to go, but the first step is done: the legislation was written and introduced!!! Thank you, Council Member Bowser!

Update: Here’s a Washington Examiner article on the proposed bill.

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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: collective action for safe spaces, muriel bowser, street harassment, WMATA

Walking While Covered

April 16, 2012 By Contributor

Via Jeddah Mind Trick Blog

This is cross-posted with permission from the blog Jeddah Mind Trick. The author is an American Muslim from Detroit, Michigan, who currently lives with her family in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia.

I heard the car creeping slowly behind me. I moved out of the way to let the driver pass on the road.  My neighborhood has no sidewalks so I had become used to yielding the right of way to cars, bikes, and the occasional mobile French Fry vendor. I was on my daily walk to the grocery to pick up items for dinner. This was before I landed a job, when visiting the produce section of the local market was the highlight of my day.

When I moved out of the car’s way, I continued walking at a leisurely pace. I was sick that morning and my head was swimming with fever. I had insisted on going for a walk against my husband’s wishes because I felt like the fresh air would make me feel better.

Even though I was no longer an obstacle on the road, the car kept up its slow creep. I turned around to look at the driver; I sensed that something was wrong. When I turned, I saw an older man with salt and pepper hair staring back at me.  He didn’t look menacing but there was something about the look in his eyes that made me feel uneasy. I turned around and proceeded to walk quickly toward my building around the corner. But the faster I walked, the faster he drove. I did not want to break out into an all-out run so I stopped cold and pretended to fiddle with something in my bag. He then drove past me and when he was completely out of sight, I walked as quickly as I could toward the end of the block.

After I turned the corner and had walked few yards, I noticed a car driving the opposite way down the street. It was the same man; he had merely driven around the corner and was now driving straight toward me. He turned around and began following closely behind me.  As he approached, he rolled his window down and whispered something to me in Arabic.  He winked.  I turned my head and kept walking into my building. I heard his car stop and he went for the door, as if to get out. I hurried to close the iron gate of the apartment complex. I heard him mutter something loudly and spin off. My heart was beating furiously as I opened the door to my apartment. My husband asked what was wrong and I told him.  He was upset and tried to rush downstairs until I told him the guy left. “That’s it, that’s the last time you are walking to the store,” he said.  “How? Am I supposed to just stay inside for the rest of my life?” I said.

As in much of the modern world, street harassment is an epidemic in Saudi Arabia. Despite strict laws governing gender based social interaction, there are men here who make a regular habit of preying upon women.  Some people will say that a woman can “invite” harassment by dressing provocatively. That morning, I was wearing a niqab, the face covering worn by Muslim women. I was new in the Kingdom and figured that dressing like the majority of the women around me would provide a level of anonymity that would help me in navigating my new city. I wasn’t wearing gloves, but everything else, except my feet, was covered in black.  I wore slippers, simple white rubber flip-flops, on my feet. Though I was wearing niqab, my eyes were still seen, and they were red and puffy from a night spent coughing and sneezing. I had no makeup or perfume on. My abaya was loose, 2 sizes too large, and it made me look like a walking black cloud.  There was nothing provocative about the way I was dressed that day, or any other day on which I have been harassed.

To the contrary, when I venture out in my school uniform, a pink lab coat, no one says a word to me. For many men in this society, wearing an abaya and niqab is seen as more desirable.  Men prefer to have a woman who is covered but there are some who take it to the extreme and fetishize women’s hijab to the point of extreme sexual desire. One of my husband’s best friends, a Saudi, sadly lamented that some men actively seek out women in niqab because they are “sexy.”  For this reason, some men request that their wives not cover their faces because the niqab can cause unwanted attention.  I find this mind-boggling.  It is incomprehensible when you consider that the abaya and niqab are used for exactly the opposite effect.  Predators have taken something that women use as a screen for modesty and turned it on its head.  Being a woman who covers is not a safeguard against sexual harassment.

Over the past year, I have been followed at least a dozen times, harassed in stores, and was even chased by a young man riding a bicycle while I was out with my son.  Weekend mornings are the worst. Saudi culture is generally nocturnal, with many people sleeping after the dawn prayer, awaking after the late afternoon prayer when they start their day.   As such, the streets are usually deserted in the morning and this is when the vultures come out. I have learned to stay inside or travel with my husband when I have to do anything on a weekend morning. I once had to pick up a discarded 2×4 on a hot Thursday morning and threaten a man who followed me for three blocks as I went to pick up bread for breakfast.

It is sad that in a place where there are already few recreational outlets for anyone, but especially women, the mere act of leaving one’s house can be cause for harassment, or worse. There are tales of women who left for bread and never returned, women who took a taxi to a friend’s house and never returned. True, according to Islamic law, a woman should always be escorted by a mahram, or male guardian. That’s perfectly fine, but what about the women with working husbands, elderly mates, or sons that are too young (like mine) to serve as any form of human shield when out in public?

Many people cast Saudi Arabia in a very pious light. Some of my Muslim friends expressed jealousy that I would get to live in a place where Islam is the foundation upon which all interactions are built.  It is true that it is easier to practice certain elements of the religion in KSA. No one looks at you funny when you wash your feet in the bathroom or stop everything that you are doing to walk to the nearest masjid for prayer. But the Yemeni tailor who presses his erect penis on my hand while measuring me for an abaya does not represent Islam. The Saudi man, the one who motions for me to get into his car while I wait for the school bus, is not a representative of Islam either.   Also uncharacteristic of Islam are the free feels that men take while a woman is making tawwaf around the Ka’aba, or the ogling by security guards when buying tea outside of Masjid An-Nabawi.  Sometimes the very men who are assigned to serve and protect women are themselves guilty of harassment. My friend was called a “bitch” by a police officer who tried to touch her while she was out for an afternoon run near her villa. This is not Islam.  This is not true Saudi culture.

I grew up in the city of Detroit amongst a sizable Arab population. The treatment I experience here reminds me of my teenage years. I remember the guys at the gas station who would try to feel up the young girls buying candy and cigarettes for their fathers. I learned my first Arabic word, habibi, when one of the men who worked at the party store used it as his pet name for my 13 year old friend who carried breasts and hips that belied her age.  I am not saying that all Arab men are predators; that would be a racist assumption and untrue. I know many men of Arab descent who are upstanding, protective individuals who are the epitome of manhood. But I would be remiss if I didn’t say there are some cultural elements in the Arab world that can cause otherwise sane men lose their minds.

Being chased down the street is what happens when boys and girls are segregated in schools starting at age 6. It is what happens when all your life you are taught that you are superior, that women’s bodies are shameful, an object meant to be protected and obscured from view. Harassment happens when it is ingrained in you that the basic human desire to interact with members of the opposite sex is thwarted by false impressions of modesty and restraint. Women who walk in fear through streets surrounding the holiest sites in Islam have become victims of a warped interpretation of honor and modesty that forces people to extremes.  Deprivation of any sort can lead to desperation.  Very few people are taught the art of healthy interaction so the product of such a strict society can manifest itself in violent, hurtful, and disdainful ways.

During the first few months of my life in Jeddah, I used to try to look very unkempt and haggard when I went out; I wore old abayas and overrun shoes. I did everything possible to make myself undesirable. It went against everything that I believe to manipulate my appearance in this way, but I was desperate for security.  I know that the way one dresses has little to do with the possibility of being sexually harassed or assaulted, but I was clinging to some hope that I could just disappear. My unkempt appearance became my refuge. It didn’t stop the harassment but it made me feel comfortable, invisible.

Nowadays, however, I wear nice abayas and even add lip gloss when I go out. I walk proudly and stare down any man who tries to intimidate me.   I even shouted at one man who followed me into the local pharmacy.   My words don’t always work, but it is a start. Some of my friends tell me that I shouldn’t leave the house without my husband. I refuse to be trapped in my home and not live a semblance of a free life.  I know that I have to be careful so I keep my wits about me and use my street smarts when needed.  I cannot surrender my life to people who want me to live in fear. I will not let the predators win. I will not allow myself to live like a victim.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment Tagged With: saudi arabia, street harassment

Man stops sexual assault of 21-year-old woman by cab driver

April 16, 2012 By HKearl

Here’s a Monday morning story that illustrates some of the worst and the best characteristics of humans.

First, the worst: A 21-year-old woman was walking home from a bar early Sunday morning, listening to music with headphones, when 27-year-old cab driver Admon Shasho saw her and decided to attack her. He parked his cab and followed her into an alley in the 4500 block of North Oakley Avenue in Chicago, IL. He first tried to rob her of her purse and phone and then pulled her to the ground and sexually assaulted her. The cab driver told her he had a knife and that he would kill her if he screamed.

Then, the best: The cab driver and young woman were loud enough that a woman in nearby home heard them and woke up her husband, Ron Psenka. He told his wife to call 911 and then he grabbed a shovel and ran out the door, barefoot and in his pajamas.

Via ABC News:

“As a parent, certainly, the first thing that might cross your mind is, hey, that could be my own child under there,” said Psenka…

“Another human being doing that to another human being is not something anybody ever wants to see,” said Psenka. “This person was more than twice her weight and was easily manhandling her, and that’s not right.”

Barefoot and in his pajamas, Psenka chased the suspect away from the alley, the three blocks from his house to Wells Park on Western Avenue, which is where he was able to flag down a squad car. The police then pursued Shasho and apprehended him.

“I think I did what anybody else probably would do in this situation and that is try and stop him,” said Psenka. “I maybe went a little further, but at this point, to stop him and to make sure that she was OK.”

The cab driver is charged with attempted robbery and criminal sexual assault. He is being held at Cook County Jail on $700,000 bond.

The victim has already stopped by twice to thank Psenka. He said that Sunday morning that, she and her mom came by with flowers.”

Thanks to Ron and his wife for doing the right thing and helping out someone in need. I hope we can all do the same when we’re in similar situations.

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Filed Under: male perspective, News stories Tagged With: Admon Shasho, Ron Psenka, sexual assault, street harassment

London candidate for mayor proposes campaign against street harassment!

April 11, 2012 By HKearl

Via Ken Livingstone's campaign page

On May 3, 2012, there will be an election for Mayor of London. This is the fourth election since the office of Mayor of London was created in 2000. Ken Livingstone is the candidate for the Labour party and he is seeking a third, non-consecutive term.

Last week he released a series of plans he hopes to implement if he’s elected that he thinks will make London safer. I’m excited to see that addressing street harassment is part of his plan!

“Ken will lead a campaign against sexual harassment in London’s public places to send a clear message that this behaviour will not be tolerated.”

This is not the first time he’s mentioned street harassment. In September 2010, the UK Anti-Street Harassment Campaign sent a letter to him about street harassment and he has agreed to add street harassment to his campaign agenda. He wrote,

“I am concerned about street harassment of women and believe there is far more we need to do to tackle this problem.

I believe we should consider tougher deterrents and punishments to tackle this crime. We also need to provide far greater support for the victims of street harassment and other crimes.

This is an issue that needs to be taken more seriously, not just by the police but our schools, parents and the wider community.

It is essential that we send a clear message that street harassment of women is wrong and will not be tolerated.”

It’s pretty exciting to see a viable candidate for mayor of a major international city like London acknowledge that street harassment is a problem and one that warrants attention! Thanks, Ken, and best of luck on May 3.

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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: Ken Livingstone, mayor of london, street harassment, uk anti-street harassment campaign

Street Harassment Design Project: Booklet for women, decoy card for harassers

April 9, 2012 By Contributor

Editor’s Note: This guest blog post is by Isobel Williams, a graphics design student in London who created an amazing project about street harassment for an assignment. Her professor gave her an A 🙂

During the final year of my graphic design degree in London, my classmates and I were given an assignment to choose a social issue that we personally feel is relevant to the area we live in, then to take that issue and research it thoroughly. The research was then to be used to create and design a graphic outcome which could poetically offer a solution to the social issue.

Street harassment was the first social issue that came into my head and it remains one I feel very strongly about. Living in south London as a 23-year-old women, it’s rare that I am out and about without some kind of perverted comment…a constant reminder that this is an issue! It is something that is relevant to the majority of women in my area and the nature of my experiences are definitely not flattering.

For my project, I designed a booklet aimed at young women, particularly students new to London, on the topic of street harassment. Within this booklet I included a card which women are invited to carry on them and give to the harassing man as a decoy. The card lists a website and if they visit the site, they can view a short film offering them a chance to gain a reality check on there actions. (The film is a prototype.)

From the large amounts of research and knowledge I gained while doing my project, I conclude there is no easy fix to this issue, but I do feel a large amount offenders are blissfully unaware of the implications of there actions. Some of the quotes I got from girls about the things that men have said to them are shockingly x rated and it makes you wonder what world these men are living in!!!

After I graduate I am interested in pursuing this issue further and potentially using my design skills to help with the cause.

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Filed Under: Activist Interviews, Resources, street harassment Tagged With: decoy for harassers, design projects, street harassment

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