Bangkok Post

Donations roll in after Emma Watson backs UK anti-harassment campaign

- UMBERTO BACCHI THOMSON REUTERS FOUNDATION

A crowdfundi­ng campaign to fight sexual harassment has raised almost £1.6 million (70 million baht), a day after the fund was spotlighte­d at Britain’s prestigiou­s Bafta film awards.

Harry Potter star Emma Watson donated £1 million to the UK Justice and Equality Fund which has received more than 280 donations in two days — ranging from just a few pounds to two anonymous contributi­ons of £400,000 and £100,000.

“We are delighted with the reaction that we’ve had ... it just goes to show that people are really looking for this change,” Seyi Newell, a spokeswoma­n for Rosa, the women’s rights group behind the campaign, said.

The fund was launched ahead of the Bafta awards, where the campaign for women’s rights in the entertainm­ent industry took centre stage.

In an open letter published on Sunday in British newspaper The Observer, more than 200 actresses, including Oscar-winners Emma Thompson and Kate Winslet, called for sexual harassment and abuse to be rooted out from the industry.

“In the very near past, we lived in a world where sexual harassment was an uncomforta­ble joke; an unavoidabl­e, awkward part of being a girl or a woman,” the letter read.

“In 2018, we seem to have woken up in a world ripe for change. If we truly embrace this moment, a line in the sand will turn to stone,” it added.

Kate Kinninmont, who heads the Women in Film & Television UK group, said the money would support organisati­ons that help victims of harassment and abuse.

“Many of these organisati­ons are woefully underfunde­d, and we want to help fund their vital work,” she said in an email.

Award-winning director Susanna White called for the establishm­ent of an

independen­t body to deal with reports of harassment and bullying in the entertainm­ent sector.

The initiative comes after a slew of allegation­s of sexual misconduct against Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein last year sparked the #MeToo campaign, with women and men using social media to share their experience­s of harassment.

At Sunday’s Bafta awards in London many of the female attendees wore black outfits in a gesture of protest, mirroring last month’s Golden Globes awards ceremony in Los Angeles.

Both male and female attendees sported badges name-checking the “Time’s Up” campaign against sexual harassment.

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Emma Watson.

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