On the night of Friday, the 29th September, Selma Taha, Executive Director of SBS, and her friends were verbally and physically assaulted in an extremely violent racist attack on public transport; (2)
this included pulling clumps of hair off Selma and her friend and biting Selma’s flesh, leaving a deeply embedded imprint of her teeth which necessitated a tetanus injection and antibiotics. (3)
A Metropolitan Detective Constable was present at the scene but did nothing to de-escalate the verbal racist abuse when the assailant, a white woman, began making monkey sounds, calling Selma & her friends “bitches”, and “slaves,” & subjecting them to other vile racist slurs. (4)
Nor did he apprehend the attacker until it turned into extremely violent physical assault. (5)
When the train arrived at the station, the police officer made no attempt to arrest the attacker, instead indicating that he wanted both parties to go their separate ways. (6)
It was only after Selma told him who she was and threatened to report him to the commissioner, Mark Rowley that he arrested the assailant. (7)
Furthermore, he did not call an ambulance for her and generally showed no concern for the victim of a severe attack that he had witnessed. If the police officer had intervened earlier, the physical pain and trauma Selma and her friends experienced could have been avoided. (8)
Six days on, we have received no updates from the police about their criminal investigation, are still waiting to hear if the attacker has been charged and no victim support has been offered to our director. Instead, the officer in question is receiving welfare support! (9)
As a result of our complaint, Directorate for Professional standards at the Met have said that the police officer has been referred to the Independent Office for Police Conduct. Black women & girls who do not have Selma’s platform & resources may not have even got this far. (10)
The racist onslaught mounted on migrants and minorities by this government, currently in the shape of Suella Braverman, has provided fertile ground for racists. (11)
Who does the police work for? Certainly not for us. (12)
30 years after the Macpherson Report highlighted the Met’s institutional racism & misogyny and confirmed by the recent Casey Report, we have seen little change to restore our faith. (13)
At a time of heightened sensitivity and acknowledgment of these issues, it is not unreasonable to expect better policing. Yet again we are being treated as offenders first and victims later. (14)
SBS is actively involved in policing reform with the aim of making it more responsive to the women facing violence from Black, migrant and minoritised communities who come to us. (15)
This includes attending regular Violence against Women and Girls (VAWG) stakeholder groups including ones on domestic abuse and honour-based abuse organised by the Met and the National Police Chief’s Council. (16)
The Met must answer for its failings. Police apathy amounts to police brutality. (17)
We would also like to extend our heartfelt gratitude to the wider VAWG sector and colleagues in the media for their support and solidarity in this time and for bringing attention to this case. We will keep sharing updates when we can. (18)
Finally, we reiterate @BTP's call for any witnesses to come forward. (19)
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In early May, SBS was astounded to receive an email stating that as of 26 May 2021, women applying for leave to remain in the UK on grounds of domestic abuse will be required to enrol their biometrics at the Home Office’s UK Visas & Immigration ‘Service & Support’ Centres. 1/7
This service was previously available at local post offices. The decision will have harmful consequences for our service-users; creating unnecessary stress & anxiety for women & resource pressures for our staff, as we'll be compelled to accompany women to immigration centres. 2/7
Alarmingly, this decision was arrived at without any prior discussion or consultation with organisations supporting migrant women whatsoever, despite an agreement to do so w/@rightsofwomen and @ILPAimmigration 3/7
Shockingly an Equality Impact Assessment of the policy by @ukhomeoffice accepts that the rule may discriminate specifically on grounds of race eg against Asian women who are homeless as a result of domestic violence. It says this is justified in order to “protect the public”
Whilst the Govt continues to make claims about treating BME survivors as “victims first and foremost” in the context of the #DABill, it is increasingly clear that its hostile anti-immigration agenda will trump the protection of women and girls from violence every time.
Thank you to everyone joining us for this evening’s webinar. SBS Director Pragna Patel explains that many women who have a religious only marriage find themselves ‘left high & dry’ after separation, by their partners, by their communities & by the state for allowing it to happen
Pragna Patel says weddings law is failing to understand minority women’s positions – it doesn’t understand the wider context in which minority women exercise choice. It’s often choice exercised in very constraining circumstances.
Pragna Patel: Minority women are shunted from pillar to post, with no one taking responsibility for their protection and justice, leaving them to regressive forces in our communities
Happy New Year. SBS is entering 2021 w/a renewed energy to fight for long-awaited protections for migrant women. As the #DABill enters #SecondReading in the House of Lords today, Govt must listen and use the chance to enshrine #ProtectionForAll:
We are grateful to @BishGloucester for leading on our amendments to extend the DV Rule and DDVC to all migrant survivors of abuse subject to NRPF. Without this women will continue to remain trapped in abuse and men will continue to abuse with impunity.