Toronto Star

‘Stop this violence, no more silence’

Western students protest what they called a toxic culture at the university

- NICOLE THOMPSON

LONDON, ONT.—Hoisting signs and chanting slogans denouncing sexual violence, hundreds of students walked out of classes at Western University on Friday to demand a change in what they described as a toxic campus culture.

The large gathering — which packed a green space on the London, Ont., school’s campus — came days after a series of sexual assault allegation­s surfaced during the university’s orientatio­n week, rattling students and prompting administra­tion to announce new safety measures.

“Stop this violence, no more silence,” the crowd chanted shortly after students left their desks at noon.

Lindsey Ip, a third-year student, said she thought the university wasn’t taking the recent allegation­s seriously. “It’s been terrifying,” she said as she held up a sign at Friday’s protest.

Katie Flannery, another student, said she’d been harassed by young men at the university as recently as a few days ago when she was walking home from class at night.

“A car full of guys pulled up, shouted at me and honking the horn, and it was ridiculous,” she said. “It’s so dishearten­ing to deal with that especially after the terrible events that took place.”

Morgan McMillan, who is in her first year at Western after transferri­ng from another school, said she’s on edge at night on campus. “It’s been kind of scary,” she said. “I had a night class last night, done at 9 p.m., and walking home from that class I was on the phone with a friend in case something happens.”

Western University and London police have said four women have come forward with formal complaints about being sexually assaulted on campus recently.

Police are also investigat­ing allegation­s made on social media of mass drugging and sexual assaults at the Medway-Sydenham Hall residence on campus during orientatio­n week. The force has said no one has come forward with a formal complaint on those online allegation­s.

Some students at Friday’s gathering wrote “love letters to survivors” that were hung on a clotheslin­e. “Hi bestie, you are doing so great,” one note said. “Stay Strong. I believe in you, we all do.”

Later, students who described themselves as survivors of sexual violence shared their experience­s with the crowd. Teigan Elliott, a third-year student, read a poem she wrote last year titled “Rape Victim.”

“If I am drunk and I smile at a man and he assaults me, suddenly no one is too sure who should be responsibl­e,” she read.

“It’s alcohol, they cried, it’s party culture. It’s boys who are taught not to take no for answer. It’s men who discovered the system is on their side. It takes the work of a community to uphold rape culture.”

Elliott told the crowd she was a victim of rape. “I’m a survivor even when I don’t feel that I have survived,” she said. “I’m a survivor of sexual assault, and I am angry.”

Western announced Thursday that it will require students in residence to take training sessions on sexual violence and consent as it works to address what it describes as a problemati­c campus culture.

The measure is part of a new action plan that will also see the university hire 100 new “safety ambassador­s” — a mix of upper-year undergradu­ates and graduate students who will work overnight in residences.

The school also plans to create a task force that will take “a comprehens­ive look” at student safety.

The province said Thursday that post-secondary institutio­ns would have to update their sexual violence policies to better support students who come forward with complaints.

Students who report sexual violence should not be discipline­d for breaking school rules about alcohol and drug use at the time of an alleged incident, and questions on sexual history should not be part of the reporting process, the province said.

Eunice Oladejo, the vice-president of external affairs with Western’s University Students’ Council, said the change is a good first step. “This will make survivors feel more comfortabl­e in the reporting and disclosure process, because as we know, there is stigma around it,” Oladejo said.

 ?? NICOLE OSBORNE THE CANADIAN PRESS PHOTOS ?? Western University students demonstrat­e during a walkout in support of sexual assault survivors in London, Ont., Friday.
NICOLE OSBORNE THE CANADIAN PRESS PHOTOS Western University students demonstrat­e during a walkout in support of sexual assault survivors in London, Ont., Friday.
 ??  ?? Students left their desks at noon and gathered on campus to display signs and chant slogans against sexual violence.
Students left their desks at noon and gathered on campus to display signs and chant slogans against sexual violence.

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