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Vigils and protests held across South London for Sarah Everard as women ‘refuse to be silenced’

The murder of Sarah Everard as she walked home at night has triggered an outpouring of sadness and criticism of the Met Police from women across South London.

A vigil held on Saturday for the 33-year-old marketing executive at Clapham Common, where she disappeared, escalated into chaos when police officers flooded the bandstand and arrested attendees.

Sarah Everard

One symbolic image from the night, that has since been shared thousands of times on social media, shows a young woman being pinned to the floor by two male police officers.

The woman, named Patsy Stevenson, spoke to the Guardian newspaper on Sunday and said her arrest was unprovoked and the actions of the police that night were “disgraceful”.

Vigils organised by Reclaim These Streets appeared across South London, including one in Crystal Palace Park, to pay tribute to all women who have been hurt or threatened by men on London streets.

Candles and flowers were laid to remember Sarah Everard, Bibaa Henry, Nicole Smallwood, Kelly Stewart, Therasia Gordon and the many others.

The Duchess of Cambridge also made an unannounced visit to Clapham Common on Saturday to pay her respects to Sarah Everard because she “remembers what it felt like to walk around London at night before she got married”.

Demonstrators took to the streets on Monday to continue to protest over the police’s handling of the vigil and hundreds gathered outside Parliament and New Scotland Yard holding signs with the words “she was walking home” and “we will not be silenced”.

Sisters Bibaa Henry (left) and Nicole Smallman, were stabbed to death at a park in Wembley.

The Prime Minister Boris Johnson has since said he is “deeply concerned” about the police response and MP’s, including the London Mayor Sadiq Khan, have called for an investigation into the events that unfolded on the Common.

Council leaders from Lambeth, Lewisham and Southwark have also criticised the Met Police’s “manhandling” of the women attending a vigil, calling it “utterly horrifying”.

Police are investigating reports that a woman who attended a vigil was flashed by a man as she made her way home but was not taken seriously when she tried to report it to officers on the ground.

Georgina Ashby told ITV’s Good Morning Britain: “I felt it was appropriate to go and tell them (the police) what had happened.”

The Met Police has defended its officers actions during Saturday’s vigil, claiming “hundreds of people were packed tightly together, posing a very real risk of easily transmitting Covid-19”.

Crystal Palace vigil, photo by Marni Appleton

There have been wider questions raised for the force after it emerged a serving Met officer had been arrested on suspicion of Sarah’s murder, while another officer was suspended for allegedly sending an offensive graphic to colleagues while guarding a cordon as part of the investigation.

PC Wayne Couzens, 48, appeared at the Old Bailey via video link on Tuesday from Belmarsh prison and has been charged with the murder of Ms Everard.

Her body was found in a builder’s bag in woodland in Ashford, Kent on March 10 after she vanished while walking home from a friend’s house on March 3.

She set off on foot for the 50 minute walk back to her flat between Tulse Hill and Brixton.

The last known sighting of her was on Poynders Road, part of the South Circular Road, which links the two areas, where she was captured on film by a private door camera as she walked alone from the junction at Cavendish Road in the direction of Tulse Hill.

Couzens has previously been arrested on suspicion of an indecent exposure involving another woman on February 28, at a fast food restaurant in South London.

He will appear at the Old Bailey again for a plea and trial preparation hearing on July 9 and face trial on 25 October, charged with the kidnap and murder of Sarah Everard.

 

People leave floral tributes at the band stand in Clapham Common, London, after the Reclaim These Streets vigil for Sarah Everard was officially cancelled. Serving police constable Wayne Couzens, 48, was charged on Friday evening with kidnapping and killing the marketing executive, who went missing while walking home from a friend’s flat in south London on March 3. Picture date: Saturday March 13, 2021.
People in the crowd turn on their phone torches in Clapham Common, London, , after the Reclaim These Streets vigil for Sarah Everard was officially cancelled. Picture date: Saturday March 13, 2021.
People stand, socially distanced in Crystal Palace Park at a vigil held to remember all the women killed or injured by male violence in London. Photo by Marni Appleton
The junction of Cavendish Road and Poynders Road, around the spot where Sarah Everard was last seen, via Google Street View
Police officers conduct a house-to-house search in Kingswood Road, Brixton, for missing woman Sarah Everard, 33, who left a friend’s house in Clapham, south London, on Wednesday evening at around 9pm and began walking home to Brixton. Picture date: Tuesday March 9, 2021.

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