The battle for safer streets is not zero sum: let’s safeguard women and fight racial stereoptyping | Jinan Younis
We demand the right to walk free from fear, but it's important to assert that everyone has that fundamental right
Over the past month, it's felt like every day has brought a grim reminder of the dangers faced by women on our streets and in our homes. The inquest into the murder of the Epsom college headteacher, Emma Pattison, and her daughter; the conviction of the murderer of the charity worker Elizabeth McCann; the arguments over the release of Joanna Simpson's killer; the life sentence awaiting the boyfriend of Elinor O'Brien, who stabbed her in a rageful and violent attack"; the conviction of the serial rapist police officer David Carrick; and the murder of 16-year-old Brianna Ghey. And it's three years since the disappearance of Sarah Everard, murdered after being stopped on her way home by the rogue police officer Wayne Couzens (affectionately known by his colleagues as the rapist").
Against the backdrop of these horrific headlines, I have been having more and more conversations with women about how they feel unsafe in the streets. We've exchanged stories of being followed and catcalled, of sharing Uber rides with each other and making sure we text when we're home safe. We've lamented the increased risk of attack that trans women face, and how Black and minority ethnic women face the threat of both racism and misogyny. We've discussed the 800 Met police officers under investigation for domestic and sexual abuse, and what it means for women's trust in the police - though that's a privilege many women of colour have never had.
Jinan Younis is Head of the diversity, equity and inclusion practice at the strategy firm Purpose Union, and a former assistant politics editor at gal-dem magazine. She has contributed to the books I Call Myself a Feminist and Growing up with gal-dem. She is the past winner of the Christine Jackson Young Persons Award
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