Western Mail

Women! Take to the streets to resist violence and oppression

The fight for equality is as important as ever, writes NUS Wales President-elect and current Women’s Officer Ellen Jones ahead of tonight’s Reclaim The Night march in Cardiff...

-

Thousands of women start courses at colleges and universiti­es across the UK every year, full of excitement and hope for the experience­s that lie ahead of them.

They might move to a vibrant new town, they’ll make new friends, and they’ll be looking forward to studying a course that will help them achieve their dreams.

But within the first week of term almost a fifth of them will be the victim of some form of sexual harassment or assault – and almost a third will witness someone else experienci­ng sexual harassment.

That this sort of behaviour is so prevalent, and becoming normal to some people’s minds, is horrifying.

That is why women will come together tonight in Cardiff for NUS Wales’ annual Reclaim the Night rally and march.

This will be a display of defiance in the face of the sexism, assault, abuse, and oppression they routinely face at home, at work, in the classroom, and throughout society.

Reclaim the Night started in the UK after Peter Sutcliffe murdered 13 women, including sex workers, in the north of England in the 1970s and 1980. The advice police gave young women at the time was not to go out at night for their own safety.

That was far from helpful, especially for those young women who were involved with sex work and plainly had very little choice about going out at night.

Women organised Reclaim the Night marches to make the point that it was their right to feel safe out at night, and that the onus to avoid sexual violence and rape was not on women to dress conservati­vely and drink minimally, but rather on men, very simply, not to rape.

You might think that was then, and this is now. But if you are a woman out at night now, in today’s Wales, you will more than likely still feel the same as most other women: unsafe.

Our world remains an unsafe and unequal place for women and girls.

January saw the inaugurati­on of a US President whose views on women, or as he has called us, “fat pigs”, “dogs”, “slobs”, and “disgusting animals”, are well-documented. Think “grab ’em by the pussy”.

Add in the fact that the UK will leave the European Union in two years’ time. We will be leaving a European Union which has been incredibly influentia­l in developing women’s rights, not just here in the UK, but across its 28 member states. Leaving the European Union means leaving Equal Pay for Equal Work and maternity pay in the hands of a Conservati­ve government obsessed with cutting “red tape”.

These are difficult and dangerous times to be a woman. But women now are doing as women throughout history have done, like the Suffragett­es and the women who made an undeniably crucial contributi­on to the French Resistance during the Second World War. We are resisting.

January 21 was the largest, and most peaceful, day of protest in US history, according to some political scientists.

The Women’s March across the US – which spread around the world, including to Cardiff and Bangor – sprang up in response to the inaugurati­on of a man with a rich history of misogyny and bigotry. But they marched, too, with their LGBT+ sisters, their BAME sisters, and their migrant sisters.

Speak to some people, and they will tell you that women’s rights are a “non-issue’”, or that the fight for women’s equality is over, and that gender parity has been won. That could not be further from the truth. The facts speak for themselves.

One in six lesbian, gay, and bi people have experience­d a homophobic or biphobic incident or hate crime during the past three years, according to research by Stonewall. What’s more, 38% of trans people have experience­d physical intimidati­on or threats.

And while violence against women transcends different ethnic groups, black and minority ethnic (BAME) women face additional forms of gender-based violence, which are themselves compounded by society’s racist practices and attitudes. We’re not just talking about oppression in the form of sexual or physical violence.

Arguing that white men are like “endangered species” in boardrooms, the chairman of Tesco’s board, John Allan, said “if you are female and from an ethnic background – and preferably both – then you are in an extremely propitious period”.

This, despite leading a board of directors on which men outnumber women three to one. And despite research by recruitmen­t firm Egon Zender which suggests that the rate of improvemen­t in gender diversity has declined in the UK for the first time since it began collecting data in 2004.

And writing for Raconteur last December, even Margot James, the UK government’s Small Business, Consumers, and Corporate Responsibi­lity Minister, acknowledg­ed that “while 14 per cent of our population identifies as black and minority ethnic, only 1.5 per cent of directors in FTSE 100 boardrooms are UK citizens from a minority background. More than half of the FTSE 100 boards are exclusivel­y white.”

So, please, let us not fool ourselves into believing that our fight is over.

It is far from over. Reclaim the Night is about resisting violence, particular­ly sexual violence, against women.

But it is also a symbol of resistance against the many and varied forms of oppression that women face every day, most especially those women who have intersecti­onal identities, like BAME women, disabled women, and LGBT+ women.

It is in their spirit, and in the spirit of the countless defiant women before us, that tonight we will shout: “Whose streets? Our streets!” Together we can, and we will, resist. Now – exactly now – is the time for us to stand together and keep up the fight for a safe, better, and equal world.

NUS Wales’ annual Reclaim the Night Wales march will start from Cardiff University Students’ Union tonight at 8pm, with placard-making and a rally from 6.30pm. More informatio­n at nusconnect.org.uk/nuswales/liberation/women-students/ reclaim-the-night-wales.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? > Protesters during the Women’s March in Washington in January – the March spread around the world
> Protesters during the Women’s March in Washington in January – the March spread around the world

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom