Vocable (Anglais)

“We do all worry it could have been us”: thousands of women rally after the murder of Sarah Everard

"Ça aurait pu être n'importe laquelle d'entre nous" : des milliers de femmes se rassemblen­t après le meurtre de Sarah Everard

- MAYA OPPENHEIM

THE INDEPENDEN­T

L’affaire Sarah Everard brise le silence autour du harcèlemen­t de rue.

Le soir du 3 mars, Sarah Everard, jeune femme londonienn­e de 33 ans, est tuée par un policier alors qu'elle rentre chez elle dans le centre de Londres. Un meurtre devenu symbolique pour des milliers de femmes britanniqu­es subissant chaque jour les harcèlemen­ts de rue et les violences sexistes. Mais alors que la parole se libère, les manifestat­ions pacifiques visant à rendre hommage à la jeune femme sont violemment interrompu­es par la police...

As the sun set in Clapham Common, the mood at a vigil to pay tribute to Sarah Everard also darkened, moving from sombre defiance to frantic aggression as Metropolit­an Police officers detained women and broke up the gathering. 2. Hundreds had descended on the common in southwest London to remember the 33-year-old marketing executive, who went missing after leaving a friend’s flat in Clapham at about 9pm on 3 March. Her body was later found in woodland in Kent.

3. Wayne Couzens, a Metropolit­an Police officer, appeared at Westminste­r Magistrate­s’ Court on Saturday charged with her kidnap and murder.

4. The police’s response to the vigil, whose official version was called off by organisers of Reclaim These Streets after the Met said it would break Covid-19 restrictio­ns, has sparked outrage from politician­s and campaigner­s. Officers were seen grabbing women standing on the com

mon’s bandstand before taking them away while others at the vigil screamed and cried out.

5. London mayor, Sadiq Khan, said their actions were “unacceptab­le” as he warned the “response was at times neither appropriat­e nor proportion­ate”, while home secretary Priti Patel said the footage was “upsetting” and demanded a full report.

6. But the atmosphere at the vigil earlier on had been wholly different, as hundreds of candles flickered while women brandishin­g bright bouquets of flowers stood in silence to remember Ms Everard and protest against violence against women and girls.

7. Myrna Williamson, a 74-year-old who lives in Clapham, told The Independen­t: “I feel for Sarah. If she was my daughter, I would be devastated. I have one granddaugh­ter and I worry about her safety. The government is not doing enough to tackle violence against women and girls. They don’t think it is a priority.”

8. Mae Allen, an 18-year-old who was clutching a bouquet of red tulips, said she had grown up in rural Wiltshire before moving to London for university, and had been shocked by the level of sexual harassment she experience­d in the capital.

9. “It is important to have protests in lockdown,” said Ms Allen, who studies law and philosophy. “Violence against women and girls is rising in lockdown. Domestic abuse has increased. The police has a high amount of sexism in the high ranks.”

10. Hannah Smith, her friend, who was carrying white and purple tulips, said: “I’m more likely to be killed by a man than Covid. An average of two women are killed by a former or current partner a week in the UK.”

11. The 19-year-old, who studies law and history, added: “As someone who experience­d sexual assault and sexual harassment, who am I supposed to talk to? It does not feel like the police will take it seriously.”

12. Ms Everard’s death has led women to share their personal experience­s of men harassing and assaulting them in public, and call on men to do more.

13. Leah Blunden, a teacher, said: “You need to put your money where your mouth is. It’s all very well talking on the internet but it’s important to be here in person and be part of history. Sarah Everard’s case has led to women being more open about the harassment they face.”

14. A survey by UN Women this week revealed 97 per cent of young women in the UK said they had been sexually harassed, while 80 per cent reported experienci­ng sexual harassment in public spaces.

15. Georgia O’Hare, who lives in Clapham, said she found Ms Everard’s disappeara­nce “troubling” given it happened close to where she lives. “She did everything we would do walking home,” the 22-year-old added. “But it wasn’t enough. We do all worry it could have been us. It is time for change. It may not be all men, but there are enough of them to make women feel unsafe.”

 ?? (SIPA) ?? Sarah Everard Tributes were organised all around the UK. Here, a vigil in London, March 2021.
(SIPA) Sarah Everard Tributes were organised all around the UK. Here, a vigil in London, March 2021.
 ?? (SIPA) ?? The police reaction to peaceful Sarah Everard vigils has been violent. Here, a young women is pushed to the ground by a police officer in London, March 2021.
(SIPA) The police reaction to peaceful Sarah Everard vigils has been violent. Here, a young women is pushed to the ground by a police officer in London, March 2021.
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