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Campaign to Make Misogyny a Hate Crime Gains Ground

Sophia Akram by Sophia Akram
11 September 2020
in Europe News, Features

A new report from Citizens UK has found that women are three times more likely to be threatened with sexual violence than men, adding pressure to existing calls to identify attacks based on gender as a hate crime.

A couple at the centre of a high-profile homophobic attack last year have joined the campaign.

“We were beaten up by a group of young men, who demanded that we kiss. It started off with aggressive harassment and quickly escalated into assault and robbery”, said Melania Geymonat and her partner Christine Hannigan in a statement.

“In the wake of being subjected to a homophobic hate crime we have been looking to find ways to ensure that we prevent other, more vulnerable people, from having to go through the horrors we did”.

The study was based on a 1,000-respondent sample from across the UK, which found 45 percent of women compared to 16 percent of men had been threatened with sexual violence. Forty three percent of women experienced a sexual assault compared with 12 percent of men.

33.5% of hate crime victims felt targeted for not only an already protected characteristic (such as race or religion) but also for their gender.

This is why we believe categorising misogyny as a hate crime gives the police a truer picture of hate crime. https://t.co/wjUYlzVLAj pic.twitter.com/XntRirFTSf

— Citizens UK (@CitizensUK) September 10, 2020

Some experiences divulged in the report include women being slammed against the wall, antisemitic abuse and Muslim women being punched in the face.

Considering misogyny an aggravating factor in violent or threatening behaviour – similar to racially or religiously motivated hate crimes – could bring harsher penalties.

Labour MP Stella Creasy has also supported the notion having tabled an amendment in 2018 to the Voyeurism (Offences) Act 2019, commonly known as the ‘upskirting bill’, currently under review by the Law Commission.

In Scotland, the process of making misogyny a hate crime is already going through Parliament. In Nottinghamshire, however, in the East Midlands area of England, a former police chief constable, Sue Fish, introduced misogyny as a hate crime in 2016.

“Making misogyny a hate crime was one of the simplest tasks I’ve ever done working in the police – and yet the results that we saw were incredible,” she said.

“Some of the feedback we had was that women, for the first time, described themselves as walking taller and with their ‘heads held high’”.

@CitizensUK, @stellacreasy

Related News:

  • Law Commission suggests misogyny included in hate crime laws
  • Sarah Everard killing reignites debate on misogyny as hate crime
  • Welsh report shows drastic increase in disability hate crime
  • EU’s unfinished project gains motion: the Balkans’ enlargement
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