Today, we launched a protest and petition for University of Birmingham to take sexual assault seriously. It was taken down by a manager after the two security guards and I agreed it was peaceful and important (1)
link: http://chng.it/BKjFjpPVL7 
UOB is letting us down when they deal with sexual harassment and sexual assault, in the past 5 years, there have been 14 complaints relating to sexual harassment or sexual assault.
That is 2.8 sexual assaults a year.
A 2019 Brook Report found that 1 in 4 students who had (2)
been sexually assaulted went on to report it. 53% of students who responded had experienced unwanted sexual behaviour from fellow students. 49% of women have been inappropriately touched, yet only 5% felt comfortable to report it. (3)
The numbers do not add up.

Often, when victims do report their assault, they are subjected to unfair and demoralising scrutiny. Where facts, like Universities’ UK Guidelines, stated that UOB had a duty to investigate student sexual misconduct on or off campus, (4)
these were ignored.
Universities are claiming that they are working on systems to ensure that victims are being supported under the programme ‘You Report, We Support’. We know that the NotON ambassadors recommend students away from this services. (5)
Universities are claiming that they are working on systems to ensure that victims are being supported under the programme ‘You Report, We Support’. We know that the NotON ambassadors recommend students away from this services. (6)
It is a known secret, proven by the past experiences of other victims, that students who report their assault to the Universtiy’s ‘You Report, We Support’ team receive no resolution and no closure to their experience of sexual assault. (7)
In 2016, the night of my 18th Birthday, I was assaulted in Halls. Asked for help but instead dropped out of fear of seeing my attacker again. I see him still to this day.
The rest of my time, I have been supported by now 5 women who have sexual assaulted. (8)
They too, being supported by those that they knew had suffered whilst at university.
Women are more likely to experience this unwanted behaviour, and our university is continually reported in the press for letting our student body down. (9)
The underreporting, the suffering in silence, and the constant looking over our shoulders will continue. Today, we launch a petition asking our university to apologise, to take responsibility and take action, (10)
and to promise not only an ‘investigation’ but a task group designed to assist any student or staff member who wishes to participate, in order to deal with this crisis. The university should offer consent classes, as a number of other UK universities already do, (11)
to empower us as students to call out inappropriate behaviour when we see it.
(12)
The shoes outside the Harding Law Library represent the silent majority, those who are too scared to speak out, and those who know they will never get the closure they need to move on from sexual assault at the University of Birmingham. (end of thread)
You can follow @reecestpatrick.
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