Cape Times

Call to treat abuse as misogyny hate crime

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LONDON: Police forces across Britain should treat abuse and harassment of women as a hate crime, activists said yesterday, citing a rise in public support for the shift after the #MeToo movement triggered a deluge of complaints about misogyny.

Campaigner­s are urging police chiefs to follow the lead of Nottingham­shire Police, which in 2016 became the first force in Britain to record public harassment of women – from groping and explicit language to sexual assault – as a misogyny hate crime.

An open letter co-signed by charities, academics and faith leaders asked the National Police Chiefs Council (NPCC) to vote this week to record misogyny as a hate crime nationwide – which could lead to tougher sentences for public harassment of women.

“The purpose of recording misogyny as a hate crime is to drive a wider culture shift in attitudes towards women and girls,” Sam Smethers, chief executive of gender equality charity The Fawcett Society, said. “It requires a different approach from the police and also requires women to perceive harassment and abuse as something they have a right to object to, rather than simply tolerate.”

An academic analysis of the shift in strategy by Nottingham­shire Police found “shocking” levels of public misogyny, with more than 90% of respondent­s having experience­d or seen abuse and harassment of women on the street.

Two-thirds of women surveyed by Nottingham universiti­es said they had changed habits – such as dress sense and transport – to avoid abuse, while about nine in 10 of the about 700 respondent­s backed the police’s policy change to make misogyny a hate crime.

Yet only one person has been convicted in the past two years under the policy, with officers unaware of the term misogyny or dismissive of actions such as wolf-whistling, the study found. “By itself, this new classifica­tion is not going to change behaviour overnight,” said Paddy Tipping, Nottingham­shire Police and Crime Commission­er.

“Our approach towards misogyny is first and foremost about supporting women and reassuring them that this type of behaviour will be treated extremely seriously.”

While the #MeToo movement and the Time’s Up campaign have raised awareness about sexual misconduct – particular­ly in the workplace – tougher police action is needed to protect women in public across Britain, said the signatorie­s of the open letter.

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