The Jerusalem Post

Everard murder pushes Brits to learn to fight street abuse

- • By SONIA ELKS

LONDON (Thomson Reuters Foundation) – The murder of Sarah Everard has led to a spike in demand for training on how to help if you see someone being harassed on the street, course providers in Britain said, as her killer, Wayne Couzens, was sentenced to spend the rest of his life in prison.

Everard’s abduction from a residentia­l street in London earlier this year sparked outrage and demands for action to ensure the safety of women on the streets of the British capital.

It also pushed people to seek advice on what to do if they suspected someone was being harassed in public, known as bystander interventi­on.

“One of the things people say so often is, ‘I wish someone had said something or done something’,” said Farah Benis, organizer of the @Catcallsof­Ldn social media campaign, which collects examples of street harassment in the British capital.

“And in the instances where someone did, that informatio­n is volunteere­d to me before I even ask, because it is so rare and people are so appreciati­ve when it happens.”

Of the more than 10,000 reports of street harassment she has received over the last three years, Benis said about two thirds of victims said there was someone else around at the time, but of those, only 7% said a bystander intervened to help them.

Scott Solder, director of The Active Bystander Training Company, said the initial news of Everard’s murder led to a doubling of bookings.

Many people want to act when they see harassment or abuse, but have doubts about how to do it, he said.

“The Everard case created a public conversati­on about really where our thresholds are in terms of the ability to live our lives without being at risk,” said Solder, who provides training to workplaces, universiti­es and schools.

“It created a national conversati­on about how we can go about showing we don’t tolerate that any more.”

Carolyn Pearson, chief executive at business travel safety company Maiden Voyage, said there was a “direct correlatio­n” to a rise in bookings for bystander and personal safety training, with many

people directly referencin­g the case.

Pearson said she shows people examples of how to intervene without aggression, including by creating a distractio­n, asking the victim if they are OK, and inviting other nearby people to help document or defuse the situation.

Benis, the anti-harassment campaigner, said any rise in bystander training was “a step in the right direction” but more action was needed to change cultures and improve reporting and prosecutio­n systems.

“It’s really positive that more individual­s are taking responsibi­lity for equipping themselves with the tools to recognise and act when they see harassment, but we need to see more on an institutio­nal level,” she said.

 ?? (Dylan Martinez/Reuters) ?? SOME OF THE tributes that were left under a tree near the place where Sarah Everard was kidnapped by a then-serving police officer before he murdered her. Wayne Couzens was sentenced to a full life term last week.
(Dylan Martinez/Reuters) SOME OF THE tributes that were left under a tree near the place where Sarah Everard was kidnapped by a then-serving police officer before he murdered her. Wayne Couzens was sentenced to a full life term last week.

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