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‘We still don’t listen to women’: How world reacted to the Kavanaugh hearing

- — By Siobhn O’Grady/ Washington Post

From Ghana to India to Ireland and China, non Americans also spent hours watching the hearing unfold.

Kavanaugh’s demeanour during the hearing, his obfuscatio­n and poorly-controlled aggression make him unsuitable for the job.”

Jane Williams | Lawyer based in London

Much of the United States spent the last week glued to their cellphones, TV screens and laptops as Christine Blasey Ford told the Senate Judiciary Committee that US Supreme Court nominee Brett Kavanaugh had sexually assaulted her when they both were in high school — and Kavanaugh insisted that he had not.

But it wasn’t only Americans watching the livestream. Around the world, from Ghana to India to Ireland and China, non-Americans also spent hours watching — some in fascinatio­n and some in horror — as the highly charged hearing unfolded. The Washington Post spoke to some internatio­nal viewers and collected others’ opinions via social media to find out how the rest of the world saw the hearing:

Ghana

Nana Agyei Baffour Awuah, a prominent Ghanaian lawyer and managing partner at SBA & Partners law firm in Accra, said in a phone call that he found Ford to be a very believable victim. But regardless of whether the assault occurred or not, he said, Kavanaugh “showed his true colours” in his responses to senators’ questionin­g, describing him as overly aggressive. Would Kavanaugh’s behaviour have been considered acceptable in Ghana? Awuah said, absolutely not. “People would have asked for him to be rejected, and I can imagine that it would have been a cross-party consensus,” he said.

He added that he thought Kavanaugh “failed the temperamen­t test, also the independen­ce of the impartiali­ty test for me”. Awuah also said he was alarmed by what he saw as Kavanaugh’s politicisa­tion of the process, calling some of his comments as pitting Democrats against Republican­s “very crazy”. “Is that something a judge going to the Supreme Court should say?” he asked. Awuah said he thought that if Kavanaugh were presiding in a courtroom and someone else spoke that way in front of him, there is “no question in my mind he would have convicted such a person for contempt of court”.

China

On the Chinese social media site Weibo, users were following a hashtag referring to Kavanaugh’s sexual assault allegation, which had drawn 1.272 million views by Friday. Some posters seemed to believe Ford’s testimony and commended her for coming forward, while others viewed her accusation as a political ploy. One said: “The Kavanaugh incident was entirely planned by the old witch Feinstein. Lock her up!” Another wrote that “America’s political norms have crumbled to the point where now Kavanaugh’s hysterical posture is completely unsurprisi­ng.”

Ireland

John O’Dowd, assistant professor of Law at University College Dublin, said the hearing was widely discussed in Ireland. He said one of the most shocking details to Irish observers was that “the committee doesn’t really have a neutral investigat­ive arm, so everything becomes reduced to a partisan conflict”.

“In Ireland, although politician­s have very strong views about selection of judges, no one is suggesting that politician­s themselves should be involved in assessing the suitabilit­y or making determinat­ions about their fitness, except to some extent when it gets to the level of executive,” he said, speaking by phone. If anything, O’Dowd said, Thursday’s hearing just reinforced the conviction in Ireland that “the American system is the one not to adopt”.

India

Vrinda Grover, a high-profile Indian lawyer, wrote on Facebook that she was “hooked watching the live telecast of the hearing”. “I wonder if some day in India, in appointmen­ts to the judiciary, there will be a strict scrutiny of the nominee’s conduct and treatment towards women? Some day, will indecency, sexual misconduct be the deciding factor in appointmen­ts to the judiciary?” she wrote. She then listed examples of law interns in India claiming that supreme court judges had sexually harassed them.

France

Natasha Carleton, a Congo-born British citizen who lives in France, said in a phone call that she was “shocked” and “very emotional about” Thursday’s hearing. She said she learned only last year that her mother had been sexually assaulted as a young woman and was told at the time: “You should be happy to be alive. You have nothing to complain about.”

“That was in the 20th century, this is in the 21st century, and we still don’t listen to women,” Carleton said.

Kenya

Alex Omondi, a Kenyan Twitter user, wrote that he thinks “a candidate seeking a position before a house committee does not behave like that unless he knows he has the backing of well-placed friends”. “I have a problem with people who want to be authoritie­s, but can’t subject themselves to the powers of other authoritie­s,” he said.

Britain

Jane Williams, a lawyer in London, said she fully accepts “that the allegation­s against [Kavanaugh] have not been (and may never be) proven to the requisite criminal standard of proof. “But his demeanour during the hearing, his obfuscatio­n, his attitude towards the female senators who questioned him and his poorly-controlled aggression are enough in my view to make him unsuitable for the Supreme Court,” she wrote. Williams added that, speaking as a foreigner, “the political nature of the process is a fascinatin­g (but to me, I confess, horrifying) contrast to the system we have here [in the US], and it seemed to me that Judge Kavanaugh was aiming to please [Donald] Trump with his performanc­e”.

The Netherland­s

Vincent van Roon, who identified himself as a city council member in the Netherland­s, said in a tweet that the “demeanour of both sides in the hearing absolutely shatters ideal/ fiction that judges are non-political”. “Whatever happens next, the court will take a huge hit in legitimacy in the eyes of half the country,” he wrote.

 ??  ??
 ??  ?? Vrinda Grover
Vrinda Grover
 ??  ?? John O’Dowd
John O’Dowd
 ??  ?? Nana Awuah
Nana Awuah
 ??  ?? Natasha Carleton
Natasha Carleton

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