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Harassers escalate to sexual assault in Leeds – police seeking info

June 15, 2011 By HKearl

— Trigger Warning —

A British Stop Street Harassment reader shared a link to the following story on the Facebook page. I’m reposting in case there are any readers who may be able to help. This is via 96.3 Radioaire:

“West Yorkshire Police are appealing for witnesses and information following a serious sexual assault in Leeds city centre in the early hours of Monday morning.

A 22-year-old woman was walking along Vicar Lane at around 1.45am when she turned into Fish Street, which is a popular cut-through to King Edward Street and Kirkgate.

At this point she was grabbed by a group of males and dragged into a nearby doorway and seriously sexually assaulted by at least one male. The males then left the alleyway in the direction of Briggate.

The woman had been at the Hi-Fi club on Central Road earlier in the evening, and on leaving the club she was approached by a group of around four males who made sexually suggestive comments towards her.

The woman ignored their advances and continued walking towards Vicar Lane to get a taxi home.

Following enquiries it is believed that the same group of males, who are all described as being dark-skinned, may have made other similar approaches to other women in the city centre around midnight and possibly earlier in the evening….

The senior investigating officer, Detective Superintendent Paul Taylor, said: “This is an extremely serious incident involving a group of males who have attacked a lone woman before at least one of them has subjected her to a serious sexual assault.

“I am appealing to any other lone women who may have been approached by this group of possibly four males to contact police as soon as they can. Information they have could be vital to tracing these males.

“It is also possible that other members of the public may have seen the group in and around the Fish Street or Vicar Lane areas, and I would also ask for anyone who thinks they have information to contact us….

“There were a number of males involved in this incident, some of which we believe will have been involved to a lesser extent than others. I would also encourage those males who may have been involved in the initial incident but not the serious sexual assault to come forward and speak to us immediately.”

Anyone with information is asked to contact the Homicide and Major Enquiry Team via 0845 6060606. Alternatively you can send text messages to 07786200805, starting your message with the word ‘LEEDS’.”

The junction of King Edward Street and Fish Street, where the attack took place.

Not only is this “shocking” and upsetting, but also it sounds like a gender HATE CRIME if these men were strolling the town looking for lone women to harass and then attack. Women should have the right to walk home in the early hours of the morning safely and when even a few men attack women, it makes all women in the area feel less safe.

If you have information please contact the police and if you live in the area, please spread the word.

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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: sexual assault, street harassment, West yorkshire police

Dear Prudence… Street Harassment is NOT Okay.

June 14, 2011 By HKearl

Via @iHollaback, I was alerted to the terrible advice that “Dear Prudence” gave regarding street harassment yesterday on the Washington Post chat. It’s reprinted on Slate.com:

Q. Catcalled: What would you say to a young women who gets catcalled often during the summer? I live in the city, and as the weather gets warmer, catcalling gets more frequent. Although I dress normally (typically shorts and a blouse in the summer), I find that I’m yelled at by old men and young men, standing on corners, driving by me, etc. It makes me tense, and now when I walk down the street, I see every man as a potential threat. It’s annoying and demeaning, but I know I can’t haul every weirdo on the street to a sensitivity class. How should I deal?

A: Wait, my dear, just wait. When I walk down the street with my lovely teenage daughter, men passing in trucks will honk their horns and make appreciative kissing sounds at her. They apparently think the prune standing next to her is deaf as well as old. Yet, their catcalls spark a vestigial memory in me—a couple of decades ago I used to hear vocal judgments from men. At the time it was annoying. Yet given their absence, I have to admit it wasn’t all bad.

Since today is apparently the “men are pigs” day at the chat, this also falls in the category of there’s nothing you can do but ignore it. And maybe a catcall is better than finding you’re being photographed and your image swapped around by horny married men.

Stop Street Harassment allies Defend Yourself and Holla Back DC! have written letters and I just sent one to her, too. Feel free to do the same: prudence@slate.com. My letter follows:

Dear Ms. Yoffe,

Via twitter I was alerted to the poor advice you gave to “Catcalled” on your advice chat yesterday. I’m appalled that you would use your very public forum to promote such damaging information. It is instances like this that make people think it’s okay to sexually harass women in the streets, even though it is illegal to do so in schools and workplaces.

Street harassment is not harmless and it is not something that young women will “miss when they’re older,” as I’ve heard older women state and you suggest. It is a pervasive problem that impacts 80 – 100% of women worldwide (including over 90% in Yemen where women are completely covered) and it is a human rights issue.

Like other forms of harassment, street harassment is bullying behavior that often happens to women who seem like a more vulnerable target, e.g. teenage girls, young women, women who are walking or taking public transportation, and women who are already part of marginalized groups like poor women or women of color. While it does tend to lessen as women age, the chance of it happening never goes away. My mother is in her 50s and continues to face street harassment. Before my grandmother died in her 80’s, she still had a few recent stories she shared with me.

Not only is street harassment pervasive but encompasses more than “catcalls.” In a study of more than 800 women around the world that I conducted for a book on street harassment, 75% of the women said they had been followed, over 50% sexually touched, over 33% been the target of public masturbation, and 25% had been assaulted by unknown men in public places.

With these figures, is it any wonder that women can feel nervous or upset at even a catcall? We don’t know which man will escalate into worse or which man will lash out at us and call us bitches, ho’s, ugly, or chase us because we didn’t “positively” respond to his inappropriate remarks.

Further, street harassment is not harmless. Studies by psychologists show that women who experience a lot of street harassment tend to engage in self-objectification, meaning they evaluate and seem themselves through they eyes of others. Women who do this are at a higher risk of depression, eating disorders, and low self esteem.

Street harassment impacts women’s mobility and sense of safety in public. Most often, in a study of 800 women I conducted for a book on the topic, it impacts their route and the time of day or night they chose to be in public, but at the extreme end, almost 10% changed jobs and almost 20% changed neighborhoods because of street harassers in the area. You can read these and more statistics about the impact on my website.

I was also disappointed that you told the woman there was nothing more she could do than to ignore the harassers. Ignoring a harasser is sometimes necessary when one feels unsafe, in a hurry, or too shocked to respond in the moment, but ignoring it doesn’t make a woman feel any better nor does it change the culture that makes it okay for men to treat women so disrespectfully in public places.

There are plenty of effective, assertive ways women can respond to harassers, they may be able to report the harassers after the fact, and they can participate in a number of forms of activism to challenge, prevent and end street harassment. Any and all of these options are far more empowering than ignoring a harasser and may prevent him from harassing someone else in the future.

I wrote my master’s thesis on street harassment as well as a book and a number of articles. I’ve given close to 50 talks and presentations and scores of interviews. I speak out on this issue in part because I’m thinking of the next generation of girls, I’m thinking of my future daughter. I want public places to be safe for them, places where they can go for a run, walk to school, take the subway or bus to work, or go out with their friends a night and not have to worry about men making inappropriate comments, touching them, or following them. As a mother yourself, I would think you’d want the same.

I hope that you will learn more about street harassment and the impact it has on women and our society and choose to give different advice the next time someone asks for it.

Sincerely,

Holly Kearl

www.hollykearl.com

www.stopstreetharassment.org

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Filed Under: street harassment Tagged With: catcalled, Dear Prudence, poor advice, street harassment

Harassment on the sidewalks in Providence, Rhode Island

June 11, 2011 By Contributor

I try to run regularly in order to stay in shape. I live in a small city, an urban neighborhood. Especially in the summer, I routinely experience men honking their car horns at me, whistling, or making suggestive comments (“Hey baby” etc).

Two instances stick out: one where a man hung out of his car window, slowed down, and licked his lips at me in a clearly lascivious way, laughing.

The second was during the late winter. I was covered head to toe in multiple layers. Not only did I receive inappropriate remarks on the sidewalk, but a teenager actually yelled from *a school bus*.

Attention such as this does not make me feel desirable. I do not feel proud of my body or my looks. When these things happen I feel insulted, disrespected, and profoundly violated albeit an invisible, spiritual way.

– Anonymous

Location: Sidewalks in Providence, RI

Share your street harassment story today and help raise awareness about the problem.
Find suggestions
for what YOU can do about this human rights issue.

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment Tagged With: Providence Rhode Island, runner harassment, street harassment

Men who victim-blame women are more likely to be harassers

June 10, 2011 By HKearl

Researchers at the University of Tennessee, Martin, found that men who blame women for being sexually harassed are more likely to be harassers themselves.

As we in the anti-street harassment movement are all too familiar with, the study found that the victim-blaming usually focused on what the person was wearing and what they were doing.

So how was the research conducted?

The researchers of the study wanted to test a theory called “defensive attribution” which suggests that people will try to protect themselves from blame in a given situation. Using this theory, the researched hypothesized that victim-blaming men would be the ones who were most likely actual or potential harassers.

To test the theory, researchers asked 119 college men, ranging in age from 18 to 28, to take a survey measuring how likely men are to sexually harass women.

Via Live Science:

“The survey doesn’t ask men directly whether they harass women, but rather asks about attitudes associated with harassment, such as whether women use sex to their advantage or are flattered by sexual advances…

Next, the men read eight short vignettes about instances of sexual harassment. In one, a male restaurant server tells his female coworker that her tips would be higher if she’d show more skin. The study participants were then asked how likely it was that they would be in the shoes of the man in each vignette and how much the fictional men and their victims were to blame for the harassment.

Unsurprisingly, the men with a high proclivity toward sexual harassment, as rated from the initial survey, said they felt more similar to the fictional harassers. They were also less likely to blame the harasser for his behaviors and more likely to blame the victim, [fitting with the self-protection theory].

The men’s attitude seemed to be, ‘I might do that kind of thing and I don’t want to get in trouble.'”

The researchers noted that their study only focused on college-aged men and focused on sexual harassment in a workplace setting, so more research is necessary.

But it doesn’t seem like much of a stretch to think that men who are okay with engaging in sexual harassment in the workplace (and blame women for it) would act the same way about sexual harassment of women in public places (street harassment).

As study researcher Colin Key said,

“The current research should provide some comfort — and an early warning — to women who have been sexually harassed and encountered victim-blaming….[They can think], As a woman, when I get blamed, maybe I shouldn’t give a crap about what that guy thinks because maybe he’s the kind of guy who would do this to me, too.”

So remember that – if someone blames you for the harassment based on what they’re wearing, there’s a good chance they’re a harasser or would-be harasser or a harasser-sympathizer! So call them out on it.

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Filed Under: News stories Tagged With: Colin Key, sexual harassment, street harassment, victim blaming, who is a harasser?

“He just couldn’t believe he hadn’t gotten away with it”

June 9, 2011 By HKearl

This is cross-posted from Kate Spencer’s Tumblr. She’s a Sr. Editor at VH1 where she writes for TheFabLife.com and VH1.com.

“I’m writing this on the R train as it rattles slowly along toward Brooklyn. I’m headed to pick up my 6-month-old daughter. I’m writing because I’m still reeling from what occurred on the Times Square subway platform a few moments ago. I was walking to the end of the station as I always do. I saw a man, a stout, balding, nondescript looking troll, staring at me as I walked toward him. I watched as he slowly extended his arm and fingers, in particular his pinky finger, so it would make contact with me as I walked by. I’m wearing a skirt. It all happened quickly, in seconds, as these things always do, and sure enough as I passed him his hand jutted out and stroked my thigh. Without thinking I turned around and hit him as hard as I possibly could. I didn’t even stop walking, nor did I say anything. I did turn around to look at him as I hit him, and his face was one of shock but not of surprise. He knew why I had hit him; he just couldn’t believe he hadn’t gotten away with it.

Ive been sexually harassed so many times since my adolescence that I’ve lost count, but I’ve never reacted like that before. Normally I think, process, choose my words. There was no brain power that went into the decision to smack this asshole; it was pure instinct. As I headed away from him I immediately regretted not verbalizing my anger and yelling at him too, but I imagine that choice was instinctive as well. Besides, I think he got the message.

I am not someone who condones violence. But I’m so tired of my safety and personal space being invaded over and over again. I am a 32-year-old woman. I am a mother. I am not someone you can fondle without my consent because you feel like it, nor is any other girl or woman. Not my friends. Not my daughter.

When I’ve explained sexual harassment to men in the past I’ve been struck at their confusion over why it is a big deal. How is someone whistling at you threatening, they ask? Here is what they don’t understand. Those moments, which may seem insignificant and small, create an unsafe environment in which women are forced to live. Last month, after I yelled at some men in a car who made kissing noises at me, I was terrified to then walk down a quiet downtown street out of fear that they’d circle around in their car and hurt me. These moments force us to operate in a state of fear. They define who is in control and who can have their control taken away. And I’m so fucking tired of it that I’m starting to snap. I’m now hitting people. Because as much as I want to believe my daughter will not have to live with this same fear 10, 20, 30 years from now, I know that she will. And nothing makes me more sick to my stomach.”

Here is her follow-up post:

“I have no idea how this happened, but the post I wrote about hitting the man who sexually harassed me on the subway tonight has somehow ended up with 2500+ notes on Tumblr. I’m completely floored by the emails, messages and comments of support you people are sending. Thank you. And to all of you who are responding with your own stories, I thank you for sharing. It is clear we are not alone. Don’t be afraid to fight back.

I’ve gotten some questions about what happened and I will do my best to respond, but one I did want to answer was if this kind of thing happens a lot in New York. This kind of thing happens a lot EVERYWHERE. This is not a New York problem, it is a human problem, a societal problem. Most of my interactions with the people of this city have been nothing short of amazing in the ten years that I’ve lived here.”

(Thanks to my sister, a New Yorker, for the heads up.)

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Filed Under: Stories, street harassment Tagged With: fighting back, Kate Spencer, sexual assault, street harassment, VH1

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