Rates of violence against women are stain on UK
Sophie Walker calls for immediate
cross-party action to end the epidemic of violence against women and girls.
6th September 2016
Soaring rates of violence against
women and girls are an indictment of the Conservative government and a stain on
the UK, the Women’s Equality Party said on Monday, calling for immediate
cross-party action to end this epidemic.
The Crown Prosecution Service’s
annual report shows prosecutions for offences against women at an
all-time high. Prosecutions for gender-based crimes including domestic abuse,
rape and sexual assaults, have risen by almost 10% to 117,568 in 2015-6.
“The last year has seen a
record number of prosecutions for rape, stalking, child sex abuse and violent
and sexual abuse online. We cannot continue to let this happen on our
watch. Future generations will ask us what we did when we knew that hundreds of
thousands of women and girls were being discriminated against and abused,” said
Sophie Walker, leader of the Women’s Equality Party. “Each and every politician
must answer that question. And if they will do nothing to prevent this epidemic
of violence, then they must fund the services that make up for their apathy.”
Walker continued: “The Women’s
Equality Party was created to fill the void that this report has so vividly illustrated.
The other political parties have failed to act to make women free from the fear
of violence. Our members have called on the Prime Minister to make saving
these women's lives a priority in her first one hundred days in office - and
they have been met with deafening silence. It is time for our Prime
Minister to make this a priority.”
The Women’s Equality Party is
demanding action from the Government to continue to improve access to justice,
and to prioritise sustainable funding for vital specialist services that are on
their knees. This follows a report on Monday that 67 per cent of refuges may be
forced to close because of the housing benefit cap.
Earlier this year the Women’s
Equality Party launched its e-Quality campaign, calling for tougher action on
online abuse and seeking to work with all other parties to make this happen.
“Since the introduction of new law criminalising the disclosure of private
sexual images without consent was introduced in April of last year there have
been 206 cases of revenge pornography taken to UK courts - but 61% of cases do
not result in prosecution,” Walker said. “The Women’s Equality Party has
written an amendment to existing law to end impunity for web providers who
profit from and redistribute revenge porn - so that those who intentionally
host or refuse to remove sexual images shared without consent face prosecution.
WE call on all parties to support this.”
Today’s report also shows an
increase in the number of stalking cases being taken to court. Singer Lily
Allen and Paladin have joined forces with the Women’s Equality Party to raise
awareness of the insidious and terrifying nature of this crime. “Lily's story
showed that the justice system still does not fully understand stalking
behaviours and risks," said Walker. "Lily carefully reported every
single incident and collected evidence, but the police failed to join up the
dots. There is a clear need to register, track, manage and supervise serial
stalkers, just as sex offenders are proactively identified and managed.”
__________________________________________
WE launched our #100daysofMay
campaign on 22 July – see www.womensequality.org.uk/100daysofMay
The campaign calls on Prime Minister
Theresa May to commit to the following by 22 October 2016:
1.
Sufficient, sustainable funding to
support specialist services to tackle violence against women and girls.
2.
Compulsory sex and relationships
education in every primary and secondary school, taught by specialist teachers
and providers.
3.
Free, government-funded childcare for
all children from the end of parental leave at 9 months until school age (the
first 15 hours/week are free, the rest payable at £1 an hour), plus the same
level of parental leave pay – six weeks at 90 percent of salary – for all new
parents with a further 10 months of leave at statutory pay to be shared between
them.
4.
An end to the detention of pregnant
women and survivors of torture, trafficking and sexual violence at Yarl's Wood,
as well as an investigation into conditions at Yarl's Wood.
5.
Confirm a timeline for the UK to
ratify the Istanbul Convention.
6.
50:50 representation in Parliament –
women should make up at least 66% of new MPs and 75% of new Peers for the next
two elections, and 75% of new peerages granted to women.
Press enquiries to press@womensequality.org.uk /
+44 7764 752 731.
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