The Star Late Edition

Rethink on hate crimes?

- Reuters

POLICE forces across Britain should treat harassment and the abuse of women that is motivated by misogyny as a hate crime, lawmakers and rights groups said in an open letter yesterday.

The British government last year said it would review hate crime legislatio­n and look at whether it should encompass new categories such as misogyny.

Public support for such a move has risen since the #MeToo movement triggered a deluge of complaints about misogyny – defined as a hatred of women.

Lawmakers Stella Creasy and Peter Bottomley and campaigner Helen Pankhurst, the great-granddaugh­ter of women’s suffrage activist Emmeline, were among those who signed the open letter.

“Because misogyny – acts targeted at women, because they are women – is not included within the law, women are left unprotecte­d,” read the letter.

“Women have the right to live free from intimidati­on, abuse and violence.”

Unlike other hate crime categories – such as race, sexual orientatio­n or religion – police currently do not record crimes that are driven by the hatred of women.

“We are not currently considerin­g extending our definition of hate crime to capture forms of prejudice and hostility that are not already included within existing hate crime legislatio­n,” a Metropolit­an Police spokespers­on said.

Official data show there were 67000 reports of gender-related hate crimes last year, and 57000 of those targeted were women.

“We have to recognise how serious misogyny is. It is at the root of violence against women and girls,” said Sam Smethers, the chief executive of the Fawcett Society, a women’s rights group.

“By naming it as a hate crime we will take that vital first step,” she said.

One in five women in Britain has experience­d some type of sexual assault since the age of 16, according to government figures.

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. |

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa