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Tackling hate crime against disabled people. Ruth Bashall, Disability Rights Campaigner, Director, Stay Safe East September 2013. East. About Stay Safe East. A user- led organisation of disabled people
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Tackling hate crime against disabled people Ruth Bashall, Disability Rights Campaigner, Director, Stay Safe East September 2013 East
About Stay Safe East A user- led organisation of disabled people • Hate crime, bullying, anti-social behaviour, domestic and sexual violence, institutional abuse • Accessible third party reporting site • Advocacy and casework • Informing disabled people of their rights • Working with partners for change • Prevention and inclusion work • Training and consultancy East
What is hate crime? A Hate Crime is ” Any crime that is perceived, by the victim or another person, to have been motivated by hostility or prejudice based on a person’s race, religion, sexual orientation, disability or transgender identity.”
Hate crime is… • Name calling, spitting • Grabbing someone’s walking frame, crutches or cane • Deliberately doing something that will make the person’s impairment worse • Bullying at school, on the bus or a day centre • Repeated threats • Vandalism, arson • Physical or sexual assault • Murder • Disabled people can be victims of racist, homophobic, faith or transgender hate crime as well as disability hate crime
Harassment and violence against Deaf and disabled people • Disabled people are 3 times more likely to experience violence than non-disabled people (Source: United Nations) • BME and LGBT disabled people more likely to be victims of harassment (Galop); 80% of young people with Special Educational Needs Statements have being bullied • British Crime Survey 2010/11: 65,000 disability hate crimes • Disabled people less likely to have confidence in the police and the criminal justice system or to be satisfied with the service they get • In 2011/12, 43,748 hate crimes were recorded by the police: • 35,816 (82 per cent) were race hate crimes • 1,621 (4 per cent) were faith hate crimes • 4,252 (10 per cent) were sexual orientation hate crimes • 315 (1 per cent) were transgender hate crimes • 1,744 (4 per cent) were disability hate crimes (disabled people are between 16% and 20% of the population) (Source: Home Office 2012)
Hate crime and the law Civil law: • Public authorities have a duty to “ have due regard to eliminating victimisation and harassment” against disabled people and other groups (Equality Act 2010) • Housing Act 1996 Injunctions by landlords, repossessions etc Criminal law • Criminal Justice Act 2003 • Section 146: An increase in sentence if the offence can be shown to be motivated wholly or partly by hostility towards disabled people. However Disability hate crime is not a crime in law– the same applies to transphobic hate crime • Racist, homophobic and faith hate crime are crimes in law.
Barriers to getting justice or resolution • Deaf and disabled people don’t know their rights and see hate crime as ‘part of life’ • Barriers: communication, physical barriers, information, lack of home visits, attitude to disabled people • Failure by agencies to identify hate crime • Treated as anti-social behaviour and dealt with by Safer Neighbourhood rather than by Community Safety Unit who deal with hate crime • Disabled people in contact with agencies do not always get justice • Hate crime is slipping off the political agenda and is no longer a priority for local authorities and the police
Will the service be accessible? Who can I Tell about this? Will they put me in a home? Will I be believed and respected?
Campaigning for action on disability hate crime: the Waltham Forest experience • 3 years of building partnerships and trust with police, the council, housing and local community agencies • Stay Safe East’s input and expertise have been welcomed • Active members of the Crime Reduction Partnership (SafetyNet) • We use casework to inform campaigning and policy • Regular meetings with the Police Borough Commander • Training for police and local authority • Starting work with schools • Monitoring and scrutiny – learning from cases • Involving our users through our Women’s Group
Some changes…. • 30% of cases refered to ASBRAC (anti-social behaviour panel) are disabled people – actions are taken • Victim support services are more accessible • Disabled victims’ needs are being met more often than before by police e.g. BSL interpreters • Disabled people better informed and less isolated • Positive leadership from police borough commander • Disability lead officer in local police, victim’s champion in local authority • Police officers more aware • Increasing numbers of hate crimes identified by the police • Disability hate crime back on the agenda? East
Some tips for action East • Support disabled people to report hate crime • DDPOs as independent third party reporting sites for hate crime • Inform disabled people about their rights • Accessible materials and approach • Talk to community groups and agencies in contact with disabled people • Focus on specific communities e.g Deaf community, LGBT groups, refugees, families of disabled people • Educate police, social workers, housing officers and other professionals
East Getting involved • Get your facts rights, bring evidence of what is happening – local and national • Speak to Councillors and your MPs • Ask to meet with the police Borough Commander – ask what he or she is doing about hate crime against disabled people? • Ask to join your local Crime Reduction Partnership • Make allies – you can’t do this alone • Challenge bad practice • Be prepared to be there for the long run – and to have to fight to get heard! • Nothing will change unless we make it!
Nothing About Us Without Us! Disabled people’s rights are human rights
Contact us East Stay Safe East 90 Crownfield Road London E15 2BG T: 0208 519 7241 Mobile and SMS: 07587 134 122 director@staysafe-east.org.uk