Become a Member
Opinion

Speak to our sons to protect our daughters

'The way that men deal with disappointment and rejection, the fragility of their egos, their lack of control - these are all factors that contribute to violence against women.'

March 18, 2021 11:06
GettyImages-1231767682.jpg
Floral tributes and messages in honour of Sarah Everard, the missing woman whose remains were found in woodland in Kent, are displayed at the bandstand on Clapham Common in south London on March 17, 2021. - Prime Minister Boris Johnson said Wednesday Britain needed "a change in our culture" to tackle violence against women and girls, as he came under pressure over the government's response to the issue which has been thrust into the national spotlight following the disappearance this month of 33-year-old Sarah Everard, whose remains were found in woodland last week. A serving London police officer has been charged with her kidnap and murder. (Photo by Tolga Akmen / AFP) (Photo by TOLGA AKMEN/AFP via Getty Images)
3 min read

My daughter is 24, and she loves walking. During lockdown, with the gyms closed, she often walks for hours at a time. Sometimes she walks on her own. Sometimes she’ll go with a friend.

Recently she and her friend were walking when a group of men started watching them. It was first unnerving, and then frightening. The roads were empty, the men were ahead of them. They doubled back, then called an Uber. Would be they be safer in a car, with a strange man driving? Thankfully, yes. No, they did not call the police. What would they have said?

Sometimes she walks around our local park. In that same park a 22-year-old woman, Iuliana, was killed in December 2017 as she walked home on Christmas Eve at 8pm. The police didn’t do much when she was reported missing. Her friends searched for her , and they found her mutilated body. A man was later convicted of her murder. Drugs and alcohol played a part in his actions, and so did porn. It was, said the judge, “horrendous and barbaric”. Her killer’s defence lawyer called it “irrational beyond comprehension”.

Her death prompted difficult conversations with my daughter — conversations about walking alone at night, conversations about personal safety. At the time she was a student, walking 45 minutes in the dark to her evening job. But she wouldn’t walk across a park at night. However, it’s not just at night that women are in danger. She was a student in Leicester, and in June 2020 a woman suffered a sexual assault in Victoria Park in the city, at 4.30pm , in broad daylight. I remember thinking — idiotically — that I was relieved that my daughter no longer lived in Leicester. Because, London is so much safer?

To get more from opinion, click here to sign up for our free Editor's Picks newsletter.