There is little information about the women killed by men. Our census is building up a picture that can help save others

On 2 January 2012 Kirsty Treloar was stabbed to death in Hackney. She was 20 years old. Just weeks before she died, Kirsty had been referred to the Nia project of which I am chief executive. Nia is a charity that supports women who have been subjected to men’s violence.

When I searched for information about what had happened to her, I came across so many reports of women who’d been killed by men since the start of that year that I made a list of their names so that I could figure out how many there were. This became a project that I called Counting Dead Women. I wanted to highlight that the women killed were not just statistics, not just numbers, but real women, who were loved and now mourned. I was angry at seeing the killings of eight women in the first three days of the year referred to as “isolated incidents” when I believe they are anything but. If any other circumstances had led to the loss of eight lives in three days in the UK, it wouldn’t be described as a series of isolated incidents. There would be serious questions asked about connections – and prevention.

Continue reading…

Leave a Reply

Your email address will not be published. Required fields are marked *

You May Also Like

FA chairman Greg Clarke forced to apologise after using the term ‘coloured’

Clarke causes consternation with other comments FA spokesperson moves to issue expanded…

Terrorism offenders ‘enjoy high status’ in prison, QC’s official report says

Independent reviewer of terror laws says staffing cuts in England and Wales…

Dave Grohl’s teenage obsessions: ‘I learned drums by arranging pillows on my floor’

Ahead of the 10th Foo Fighters album, their frontman recalls the music…

UN head accuses fossil fuel firms of business models ‘inconsistent with human survival’

Criticism at Davos for big companies who, ‘like the tobacco industry’, ride…