Women face danger daily. This murder is more proof
It was every woman’s worst nightmare come true when Sarah Everard’s body was found in London, U.K., a week after she disappeared on March 3. The 33year-old marketing executive was last seen walking home after visiting a friend.
On Friday, British police arrested a serving Metropolitan Police officer, Wayne Couzens, with Everard’s murder and kidnapping. Her murder dominated world headlines, sparking rallies, outrage and dialogue about violence against women.
According to reports, her journey home included well-lit paths and streets bustling with traffic. Yet, this seemingly routine activity of walking home resulted in her death.
Everard wasn’t safe. And neither is any other female. Women around the world are under attack; because one in three women around the world is subjected to either physical and/or sexual intimate partner violence or nonpartner sexual violence in their lifetime.
Girls are aware of the threats against them from a young age. Almost every woman I know has experienced sexual or physical violence from a man; it’s almost a normality. These have become the anthems of millions of women courageously sharing horror stories about rape, violence and in some cases barely escaping with their lives.
I know. I am one of them. At age 12, I was raped by two men and held against my will in Edmonton after I ran away from a group home. I barely escaped with my life. The men saw no wrong with raping an underaged child and were never brought to justice for what they did. This is the kind of entitlement that many men have toward women and our bodies. It’s terrifying.
There’s a code of safety and protection that women practice because we must. We don’t go walking alone at dusk, or nighttime, unless we have a big dog or carry pepper spray. We look over our shoulders when walking alone in an underground parking lot.
We avoid taking cab rides alone with a male driver. If I have to, I make sure to sit in the front and clutch my cellphone and the door handle, just in case. It’s not safe to even walk from our vehicles to our homes at night in some places.
I also have fear of law enforcement. I’ve heard first-hand testimony of RCMP raping Indigenous women and girls or treating them violently. It’s documented in a Human Rights Watch report released in 2013. For years I’ve been afraid of being pulled over by police if I’m driving out of the city at night and alone. So, I tell myself if it ever happens, I will speed to the nearest town and then pull over because I don’t trust the cops otherwise.
The fact that Everard’s accused murderer is a police officer, supposedly working to serve and protect London citizens, is appalling and confirming of these fears. He, too, felt entitled.
Almost every woman I know has been catcalled, solicited for sexual encounters online or sent dick pics from out-ofcontrol men who perpetuate perversion and violence.
In North America, Indigenous women have it worse — 12 times worse than non-Indigenous women. Imagine being a target of potential violence in society just because you’re a woman, but then knowing the stakes are way higher if you’re Indigenous. The United Nations calls violence against women a pandemic, but, there’s a genocidal pandemic against Indigenous women and not much is being done about it.
Sexual assault, violence and murder of women is a global emergency. Society should unite to end it.
But, according to UN Women, less than 40 per cent of women who experience violence seek help of any sort.
My 16-year-old daughter knows what happened to Everard, she knows about what happens to Indigenous women and girls. The other day at dinner she brought up Everard, sighed and said, “I just don’t trust any men in this world.”
That broke my heart. I told her to take precautions, and that not all men are this way. “Things are changing my girl,” I said. Women are taking back their power by speaking out, rallying, and educating their sons about the value of women and respecting us.
Governments need to put these human rights violations at the top of their priority lists and perpetrators should be dealt with harshly. The day when women are safe to walk home will be an accomplishment the world can celebrate.