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Women suffer 80 per cent of sexual assaults – UK data; In Australia, sexual consent app proposal sparks criticism

London, UK
Thomson Reuters Foundation

Women make up 80 per cent of sexual assault victims over the age of 16, official data showed on Thursday, as Britain moves towards classifying misogyny as a hate crime in the wake of protests over the murder of Londoner Sarah Everard.

The latest statistics showed little progress in tackling sexual assault, with 773,000 people – 1.8 per cent of adults in England and Wales – experiencing rape, assault by penetration, indecent exposure or unwanted sexual touching in the year to March, 2020.

UK woman walking

A woman casts a shadow as she walks along an alleyway in central London, Britain, on 3rd October, 2016. PICTURE: Reuters/Stefan Wermuth/File photo.

“The number of offences recorded by the police remains well below the number of victims estimated by the survey,” said the Office for National Statistics, with fewer than one in six victims of rape or assault by penetration reporting the crime.

“Under-reporting to the police is particularly acute for sexual offences,” it added – an issue that has been raised in recent days by campaigners calling for greater action to tackle male violence against women.

IN AUSTRALIA, SEX CONSENT APP PROPOSAL SPARKS CRITICISM

One of Australia’s top police officers faced criticism on Thursday for suggesting an app that records sexual consent could be used to address a rise in sexual assault cases.

Mick Fuller, police commissioner for New South Wales, said an app that allowed people to digitally document their agreement before having sex could be “part of the solution”, after cases of sexual assault in the state rose by 10 per cent last year.

“I am just suggesting: is it part of the solution? Maybe it’s not, but if we don’t do something then more and more women are going to come forward seeking justice for sexual violence,” he told reporters.

The proposal, which followed allegations of sexual misconduct by top Australian officials that have triggered widespread protests, sparked a mostly negative response, with many saying technology was not the answer.

“It’s good [the NSW police are] acknowledging the need for affirmative consent, but this isn’t a safe way forward,” said Hayley Foster, the chief executive at Women’s Safety NSW, the state’s domestic violence service.

“The abuser can simply coerce the victim to use the app,” she tweeted in response to Fuller’s comments.

“I’m mystified by the ongoing belief that technology must be a good solution in situations where we are dealing with power, nuance and complex human behaviour,” said Annabelle Daniel, head of Women’s Community Shelters, a charity.

Tens of thousands of women gathered outside Australia’s parliament and took to the streets across the country on Monday, calling for gender equality and justice for victims of sexual assault.

– BEH LIH YI, Thomson Reuters Foundation

A serving police officer has been charged with the kidnap and murder of 33-year-old Everard, who was abducted as she walked home, and is set to go on trial in October.

The police have also come under fire for dragging women away in handcuffs while dispersing a vigil on Saturday for Everard, which they said breached COVID-19 lockdown rules. 

Women’s rights campaigners want misogyny to be made a hate crime to help detect and prevent violence against women, and end a culture in which abuse is tolerated, excused and repeated. 

An amendment to the Domestic Abuse Bill, which was debated on Wednesday in Britain’s upper parliamentary chamber, the House of Lords, would require police in England and Wales to record crimes motivated by hatred of someone’s sex or gender.

Home Office Minister Susan Williams told parliament that she opposed the amendment as the necessary powers were already in place to require the police to provide such data but said she would ask the police to collect it “on an experimental basis”.

“We will ask police forces to identify and record any crimes of violence…including stalking and harassment, as well as sexual offences where the victim perceives it to have been motivated by a hostility based on their sex,” she said.

About a quarter of 43 police constabularies in England and Wales have already made misogyny a hate crime, trialled the policy or are considering implementing it. 

Similar protections already exist for race, religion, sexual orientation, disability and gender identity and can lead to harsher penalties for those convicted.

“The government has listened to this cross-party and grassroots campaign to make misogyny a hate crime and is now taking the first steps towards making it happen,” said lawmaker Stella Creasy, who has campaigned for the reform.

“Recording where crimes are motivated by hatred of women will help us better understand the scale of the problem,” she said in a statement.

 

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