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24 September 2014

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Suffolk Murders 2006

You are in: Suffolk > Community > Suffolk Murders 2006 > The wrong advice?

Sir Alf Ramsey Way, Ipswich

The wrong advice?

A march was organised in Ipswich for Friday 29th December in response to the police advice to women to stay at home in the evenings at the height of the murder investigations. It followed the killings of five women who worked as prostitutes.

The march is starting on the steps of Ipswich Town Hall from 7pm onwards and it'll pass through the town's red light district around Portman Road football ground.Μύ It follows the killings of the five women who worked as prostitutes in that area.

The march was planned before any arrests into the murders were made by Suffolk police.Μύ During the period before that the police advice was for women not to go out alone at night.

Rebecca Dale is one of the march organisers: "The main reason is that women have been told to stay in in both Suffolk and Essex.Μύ I don't feel that that makes people safe.

"As a thought experiment, if a man is out murdering women, why don't we say men stay in so that women can go out safely?Μύ That's a really incredible thing to say, but it sounds completely acceptable to tell all women to stay in when it's dark - and it's getting dark at half past three.

"I believe that the police were trying to do their best, but I believe they were wrong.Μύ It didn't make us feel any safer, it just made us feel more fear.

"As women, we are reclaiming the right to be wherever we want to be without feeling in danger."

The march has its roots in similar protests which took place in West Yorkshire during the investigation into the murders by the Yorkshire Ripper Peter Sutcliffe in the late 1970s and early 80s.

The organisers of the Ipswich march say it has other aims:

  • to show support for the women who were murdered
  • to press for proper counselling services for those who feel they have to sell their bodies to pay for drug addiction
  • to point out that 1 in 4 women suffers violence from a partner and that it's completely unacceptable

The police have since stepped back from their original advice and are pointing us to their usual advice about personal safety when going out at night.Μύ This includes planning ahead, working out how to get home in advance, staying with friends and taking care of each other.Μύ The Stay Safe This Christmas advice is available on the Suffolk police website (link on the right>)

last updated: 23/04/2008 at 12:51
created: 29/12/2006

Have Your Say

What should the correct advice be? Tell men, women or everyone to stay indoors?

The Βι¶ΉΤΌΕΔ reserves the right to edit comments submitted.

louise
safety of sexworkers uk says, not enough is being done to support women whos works in the adult trade, weather it be street base work or in house/ flat work. weather it be sex serivces/ escort/ or just non sex base massage serivce. Attacks/ rapes/ murders happen to those working in doors to, and since 2003, sosuk has been campaigning to home office to either adjust or change the laws to allow more then one person working in doors for safety reasons and not haressemnt on to street base sexworkers. Its not about having all women stay in doors, as whos to say the person you met a few times in a pub and take back ones place to chill out with, could end up attacking the women. It's about using commen sense when out.

You are in: Suffolk > Community > Suffolk Murders 2006 > The wrong advice?

Abolition

Slave notice and Thomas Clarkson

The Suffolk man who campaigned against the slave trade



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