Sunderland Echo

Warning as charity hands over petition

- By Petra Silfverski­old echo.news@jpress.co.uk Twitter: @sunderland­echo facebook.com/sunderland­echoonline @sunderland­echo

Campaigner­s fighting to save a‘ vital’ domestic violence charity in Sunderland have handed over a petition with thousands of signatures amidst fears that lives could be at risk.

Wear side Women in Need (WWIN) director Claire Phillips on fears that the closure of its refuges, outreach groups and helpline could lead to the death of victims.

Campaigner­s fighting to save a ‘vital’ domestic violence charity in Sunderland have handed over a petition with thousands of signatures amidst fears that the lives of thousands women and children could be at risk.

Earlier this week, the Echo reported that Wearside Women in Need (WWIN) had received official confirmati­on from Sunderland City Council that its £586,000 contract would not be renewed when it comes to an end in July.

The organisati­on’s director Claire Phillipson fears that the closure of its refuges, outreach groups and helpline could lead to the death of victims.

However, council chiefs have hit back at suggestion­s the city will be left without a service to help victims of domestic violence and insist this is simply a contract coming to an end to make way for a “new model of the service” and that there was no question of putting any lives at risk.

WWIN hopes that the petition – featuring 6,333 signatures – will be considered by members at the next full council meeting.

Ms Phillipson and a number of supporters handed over the document to Coun Graeme Miller, the authority’s portfolio holder of Health, Housing and Adult Services.

She said: “It’s absolutely vital – our staff mantra these days is that we can get another job, but these women and children annot get another life – you cannot resurrect the dead.

“You can’t undo the trauma of being trapped in an abusive relationsh­ip – terrorised every day and having nowhere to go.

“Lives are undoubtedl­y at stake, that’s not an exaggerati­on, that’s not me trying to drum up support, it’s just a fact.

“Two women a week in the UK are murdered by their partners or their expartners.

“We have managed for the last 10 years to keep murders out of this city.

“If our services are rolled back, if our helpline closes, the outreach groups go, if our refuges are gone, then there will be no sanctuary for these women who are running to us, and it is inevitable that someone will die.

“None of our staff team want to be in this position of fighting with the council but wehavetodo­it.

“We are here on behalf of the people who haven’t got a voice.

“We are hoping the council will think again. We are hoping the 75 councillor­s who hold the lives of thousands – literally – of women and children in their hands, that they can decide this is the wrong decision and that domestic violence is a priority in this city.”

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 ??  ?? The domestic violence petition handed over to Sunderland City Council. Front right, WWIN director Clare Phillipson and chairwoman Doris Maddison.
The domestic violence petition handed over to Sunderland City Council. Front right, WWIN director Clare Phillipson and chairwoman Doris Maddison.

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