
The Observer view: This grim roll call of femicide will only end if we stop letting killers off lightly
It is the grimmest of roll calls: to mark International Women's Day, the names of women killed by men over the past year are read out in the House of Commons by Jess Phillips MP, now the minister for violence against women and girls. This year the number stood at 95. It was accompanied by a report by the charity Femicide Census setting out the characteristics of the 2,000 killings of women by men since 2009 where criminal justice proceedings have been completed.
The charity compiles the list annually, and without this important work, based on freedom of information requests to the police and extensive media monitoring, we would have no national oversight of the number of women known to be killed by men in the UK. Since 2009, it has amounted to one every three days on average. And these are just the cases we know about; the campaign group Killed Women estimates that there could be as many as 130 'hidden homicides' a year where a woman is killed by a partner or family member but the death is recorded as accidental or suicide.
Male violence against women and girls is the most toxic symptom of a patriarchal society that is riven with gender inequalities. In recent decades, despite some important changes, too little has been done to address the scourge of men physically and emotionally abusing women and children.
The data shows that the most dangerous place for these women is behind closed doors: for seven out of 10 women killed by men, it happens in their own home. Six in 10 are killed by their partners; almost one in 10 by their son; just 9% are killed by a stranger.
Work by the criminologist Dr Jane Monckton Smith has found that men do not kill women they know out of the blue: there is almost always a pattern to femicide that includes a pre-relationship history of stalking or abuse; a romance quickly developing into a serious relationship that becomes dominated by coercive control; a trigger that threatens the man's control, such as a threat to leave the relationship or the relationship ending; and a resulting escalation in his control, such as stalking or threatening suicide.
These behaviour patterns mean that such killings should be preventable. Yet we still have a criminal justice system that – despite recent reforms – sometimes allows men who kill women to be treated lightly by pleading manslaughter on the basis of loss of control.
Femicide Census argues that this appears to constitute 'a state-sanctioned means by which previously violent men can limit their liability for fatal violent acts'. In many of the cases reviewed in the report, the qualifying trigger for a loss of control was the victim leaving an abusive relationship or entering a new relationship. The most dangerous moment for a victim is the point at which she leaves her male partner, or indicates a desire to leave. It is perverse that this aspect of the law appears in practice to make allowances for men who kill women exercising their right to leave an abusive and violent relationship. And too little is spent on monitoring men with a known history of violence against women, including those known to be repeat offenders.
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The Labour government has an ambitious target to halve male violence against women and girls. But it has yet to define what would constitute success against this, let alone set out a properly resourced plan for keeping women and children safe from the dangerous men who kill. Only that can bring the rate of femicide down.
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Daily Mirror
4 days ago
- Daily Mirror
Sick 'pimping websites' given four-word warning as MPs demand new laws
Safeguarding Minister Jess Phillips says tough new laws will give courts the power to suspend adult service sites behind sexual exploitation as MPs demand paying for sex is made illegal Vile "pimping websites" have been warned "we're coming for you" by a government minister. Jess Phillips said it was "sickening" that traffickers are making huge profits from selling exploited women for sex online. The Safeguarding Minister said new laws will give authorities the power to ban adult services sites that facilitate sex trafficking. But she stopped short of pledging to make it illegal to pay for sex despite growing calls from MPs. The Government is under pressure to change the law to target buyers and those who profit from exploiting others - while ripping up existing prostitution offences. Ms Phillips told MPs it is "utterly dispicable" that men post online reviews of women who are coerced into having sex. She said: "These men disgust me with their attitude towards women generally and also the suggestion that they should be able to pay for somebody's horror and then give a bad review." Brits should learn to speak Russian if defence spending isn't ramped up, NATO chief warns And Ms Phillips continued: "These sites - we know what they are - we're coming for you." She said legslation going through Parliament will allow courts to suspend websites behind sexual exploitation. And she said the Government will be publishing its strategy for tackling violence against women and girls later this year. The remarks came after Labour backbencher Tracy Gilbert read out a number of sickening reviews posted about women online. Under current law it is legal to pay for sex and adult services websites - branded " supermarkets of the vulnerable" by ctitics - are not breaking the law. Ms Gilbert told MPs that those who pay for sex must face prosecution. She said: "Sex buyers rely on being unseen while they ruin lives leaving us as a society and the individual women left to pick up the pieces of the carnage they cause. "The demand from men who pay for sex fuel a brutal prostitution and sex trafficking trade. It's funding predatory websites which make millions of pounds using women for sexual exploitation every day." And the Labour MP added: "The law must accept that prostitution is is violence against women." It comes after Labour MP Tonia Antoniazzi tabled amendments to the landmark Crime and Policing Bill calling for those who pay for sex - predominently men - to face prosecution. Her proposals, backed by more than 50 MPs, would also tear up prostitution offences, which campaigners say trap exploited women from escaping their abusers.


Daily Mirror
7 days ago
- Daily Mirror
'I'm haunted by 999 call played in court - I still play it to myself'
Nour Norris has implemented new law supported by MP Jess Phillips calling for a specialist police response to victims of domestic violence after the murders of her niece and sister who died while on the phone to West Midlands Police Presenting a Special Recognition Award to a woman whose campaigning changed the law after the murder of her sister and niece, Jess Phillips revealed she is haunted by the sound of their screams. Nour Norris' older sister Khaola Saleem, 49, and niece Raneem Oudeh, 22, were stabbed to death by the younger woman's ex partner Janbaz Tarin, 21, in a frenzied knife attack on August 27 2018 - after police failed to respond to their pleas for help. A supporter of The Mirror's Justice For Our Daughters campaign, Nour is finally seeing the positive effects of Raneem's Law - calling for a specialist police response to victims of domestic violence - for which she has lobbied tirelessly. She was backed by MP for Birmingham's Yardley, Jess Phillips, Minister for Safeguarding and Violence against Women and Girls, who lives less than a mile away from Khaola's home in Solihull, where the mother and daughter were killed, after making four 999 calls that night. READ MORE: 'My boyfriend almost beat me to death but I was so under his control it took me years to break free' Raneem had made four 999 calls that night before the police called her back. While on the phone to the call handler she was killed. Speaking at this week's True Crime Award s in London, where Nour was honoured for her campaigning, Ms Phillips recalled hearing audio of the final call when she was killed, saying: "I'll never forget as long as I live. 'Sometimes I'll listen to it again to remind myself of the sound of what was played in the court in the inquest - her voice on the call - and just how badly the call was handled. 'It is devastating to listen to, and through that one bit of audio it was immediately clear that this is the thing we are going to have to change.' Since that harrowing audio was played at the inquest into their deaths in 2022, Jess has worked alongside Nour to deliver Raneem's Law - embedding domestic abuse specialists in 999 control rooms, with the aim of providing better support for victims. It is now live in five police forces - West Midlands, Northamptonshire, Bedfordshire, Northumberland, and Humberside - with hopes to roll out across the country as soon as possible. Praising Nour for channelling her loss into bringing about meaningful change for domestic abuse victims, at the event at Hilton London Bankside, Ms Phillips vowed: 'We won't stop until every victim gets the protection they deserve.' A longtime campaigner for victims of domestic violence, Jess spoke of her heartbreak that, as a local MP, she did not know of the mother and daughter's trauma until it was too late. 'Their deaths were avoidable,' she said. 'Not just on the night - there were nine other times Raneem called the police. I feel like if I had known them before, they would still be alive. If they had somebody like me advocating for them. " Mistakes made by West Midlands Police "materially contributed" to their deaths, the inquest heard. Members of the force had previously responded to 10 domestic abuse incidents linked to violence at Tarin's hands, and five officers were subsequently disciplined over its failings. On the day they died, Tarin spent hours searching for Ms Oudeh and her mother before the double-murder. Raneem and Khaola had been at Nour's home just hours before the murder. She told The Mirror: 'I was very worried for them. I made lots of food so they would stay. I just wanted them to stay with me. I knew he (Tarin) was harassing them, but not how bad things had got - my sister and niece never said. But I had a horrible feeling in my heart.' Referring to the harrowing 999 calls, she added: 'The police heard my niece screaming as she was attacked.' Describing how her sister tried to save her daughter, she continued: 'My sister did what the police should have done that day, and her life was taken. "After Raneem's first and second call ( to the police) he (Tarin)realised he could get away with it. He told her 'they listen to me so why are they going to believe you?" 'He was never arrested or cautioned. It's very painful and frustrating to know if the calls had been taken seriously, they would be still here.' Raneem, who fled to the UK in 2013 from war-torn Syria, had been issued a restraining order, which Tarim repeatedly violated, leaving Raneem terrified for her and her family's lives, as he made threats to kill them. In December 2018, he was jailed for a minimum of 32 years, for what officers described as the "brutal murder of two defenceless ladies by a man who had spent the day hunting them down". Now Ms Phillips hopes the embedding of domestic abuse specialists in 999 control rooms will help to save lives. She said: 'It should mean that when a victim like Raneem makes that brave call for help they receive an immediate and expert response." The True Crime Awards, partnered by I-ME, were established to celebrate content being produced across the true crime genre - bringing together creators as well as those affected by crime who have gone to campaign for legal improvements. Previous recipients include Marie McCourt MBE for delivering Helen's Law - denying killers parole for failing to tell the location of their victims' remains - after her daughter Helen was killed after vanishing near their home in St Helens, Merseyside in 1988. The Mirror's Justice For Our Daughters campaign, which has called for a number of changes to protect victims of domestic violence. Justice For Our Daughters Demands 1 Longer sentences for domestic abuse killers Under current laws if a murderer has brought a weapon to a scene with intent to kill, he or she would expect to be jailed for 25 years. However, if you kill someone with a weapon already at the scene the starting point is 15 years. The law should be updated so these domestic violence killers receive 25 years too. 2 Longer sentences for murder by strangulation A quarter of domestic homicides are by strangulation. The law should be updated so that when someone is fatally strangled the method of killing is regarded as an aggravating factor and carries a longer sentence. 3 Domestic abuse specialists in 999 control rooms For victims of domestic abuse to be given immediate access to trained specialists in police control rooms, in line with Labour's pledge. 4 Domestic abusers to face manslaughter charges if victims take their own lives Coercive control and abuse perpetrators should face legal consequences in line with the suffering they have cause..


New Statesman
04-06-2025
- New Statesman
Labour MPs are revolting on Gaza
Photo by House of Commons It has been 606 days since the start of the war in Gaza and according to Gaza's health ministry, as of 5 May, 52,615 people have died. The conflict has reached a turning point; a 'dark new phase' as the Foreign Secretary David Lammy recently described it. Today, the US-backed organisation operating aid distribution centres in Gaza announced they would be closed all day. The Israel Defence Forces (IDF) told people in Gaza this morning, that 'travel is prohibited…via the roads leading to the distribution centres, which are considered combat zones'. Entry into the areas around the distribution centres is 'strictly prohibited'. This follows an 11-week blockade of aid, food and water into Gaza, and attacks by Israeli forces on Palestinians near aid distribution centres, the last of which left at least 27 Palestinians dead (Israel's military has denied firing 'near or within' the site). On 19 May Keir Starmer signed a joint statement with the leaders of France and Canada strongly opposing Israel's military operations. But has the Prime Minister's position shifted tangibly yet? The UK has not recognised Palestine as an official nation and has not withdrawn from the F-35 jet fighter programme (the government's riposte for not withdrawing is that remaining in the programme is important for Nato's peace and security). These were two issues which Hamish Falconer, the minister for the Middle East, was quizzed on for more than an hour in the House of Commons today. Falconer was called in front of MPs to answer an Urgent Question (UQ) from the Labour MP for Liverpool Wavertree, Paula Barker. In his statement to the House, Falconer said Israel's block on aid into Gaza was 'unjustified' and 'inhumane'. The Israeli government's decision to 'expand its military operations in Gaza and severely restrict aid undermine' the push for peace and release of the remaining hostages. But he stopped short of telling MPs that any further action would be taken by the government. Unusually, all MPs who spoke in the session were united in the belief that the violence in Gaza must end. A row of back-bench Labour MPs, all of whom had attended the Red Line for Palestine protest which congregated in Parliament Square earlier that day, and many of whom were wearing red, loomed at the back of the chamber. They were joined by the independent MP Zarah Sultana, who used her question to criticise Lammy ('It is a disgrace that the Foreign Secretary isn't here. But it isn't surprising.') The group could be seen shaking their heads and rolling their eyes each time Falconer gave an unsatisfactory answer. As the MP who brought the UQ, Barker kicked off proceedings, asking the minister, 'what more evidence do we need to call this exactly what it is – a policy of annexation and genocide'. She added: 'History will not look kindly on this government.' Richard Burgon asked why, if the government had sanctioned Vladimir Putin after Russia's invasion of Ukraine, would it not sanction Israeli politicians. 'This reek of double standards,' he said, 'Netanyahu will see the government as weak, weak, a pushover and a joke.' Falconer responded: 'Let us not pretend this government has done nothing. We have taken measures, and we will continue to do so.' Meanwhile, various Conservative MPs also used this session to criticise the government. Kit Malthouse, the Tory MP for North West Hampshire pointed out that in the three weeks since Falconer last gave a commons statement on Gaza, Israel said it will establish 22 new settlements in the occupied West Bank. 'It feels like the whole House has been played,' said Malthouse. 'He shows up, he mouths the words and very occasionally the government leaks out just enough sanctions to keep the Labour benches from open revolt.' As Falconer responded ('I'm under no illusion of the severity of the situation we currently face'), Malthouse shouted back, incensed, 'they're killing dozens of people, every day'. The 90-minute session ended flatly. In the minutes afterwards, Jeremy Corbyn took his moment to present his Ten-Minute Rule Bill, which he had hoped might force the government's hand on Gaza, if sent to a vote of all MPs. (Falconer had already rejected Corbyn's request during the UQ, 'I do not see… what an independent inquiry would achieve'). Instead, it was waved through by the Deputy Speaker, who urged the independent MPs who had shouted 'no' in order to force a vote, to retract their objection unless they actually meant it. They all did so. It is now up to the government to decide whether to progress the bill. Corbyn pointed out that today's events in the Commons reveal that 'some politicians have finally started to backtrack'. He added: 'Perhaps they are frightened by the consequences of their inhumanity.' Subscribe to The New Statesman today from only £8.99 per month Subscribe It is clear now that the government can no longer rely on speeches and statements to convince MPs they are sufficiently committed to action on Gaza. Falconer's defence that the government is waiting for 'something to change' before its next move repeatedly fell flat. Because something has changed: Israel's actions in Palestine are clearly no longer simply an act of self-defence – but of systematic aggression. The government has run out of time for equivocation on Gaza – it is already starting to look weak. [See more: Inside No 10's new dysfunction] Related