‘Press, run, report’: Beirut women given personal alarms to protect against harassment

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The Becky’s Button Association has set up a tent on the Beirut Corniche to attract women and children, introducing them to the small, lightweight alarm device. (Supplied)
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The Becky’s Button Association has set up a tent on the Beirut Corniche to attract women and children, introducing them to the small, lightweight alarm device. (Supplied)
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The Becky’s Button Association has set up a tent on the Beirut Corniche to attract women and children, introducing them to the small, lightweight alarm device. (Supplied)
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Updated 19 August 2023
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‘Press, run, report’: Beirut women given personal alarms to protect against harassment

  • Becky’s Button named after British Embassy worker killed in brutal 2017 attack

BEIRUT: Small portable alarms named in memory of a young British Embassy worker raped and murdered in Lebanon in 2017 have been distributed on Beirut Corniche as part of a campaign to protect women and girls from violence.

Known as Becky’s Button, the lightweight devices were handed out by the Becky’s Button Association on Saturday, with volunteers explaining how the alarms can offer protection from sexual harassment or assault.

When activated, the alarm emits an ear-piercing signal that can frighten off attackers and alert anyone nearby, offering wearers a few seconds in which to escape.

We all know what happened to Becky. The news was shocking at the time and women in Lebanon are still living with the repercussions.

Shaima Masri, University professor

The alarm is named after Rebecca Dykes, the 30-year-old British Embassy worker raped and strangled to death in 2017 by a taxi driver.

Dykes’ killer, Tariq Samir Huweisheh, was sentenced to death by a criminal court in Mount Lebanon.

On Saturday, volunteers wearing T-shirts bearing the words “Press, Run and Report” explained the benefits of the device and how it could protect women exposed to any kind of danger.

A British Embassy official joined the volunteers as the alarms were handed out to women passers-by. Female officers and members of the Lebanese Internal Security Forces were also present.

Becky’s Button can be placed under clothing or attached to a bag.

Becky’s mother, Jane, who has been donating the alarm to vulnerable women, believes her daughter’s life might have been saved if she had such a device.

The alarm is provided to women after an interview at the Ahla Fawda NGO, a community organization.

“Stocks are currently limited, but they can be requested via social media,” an association activist said.

Women and girls walking or jogging on the corniche In the early morning stopped in front of the volunteers’ tent, which had been set up in front of a large photograph of Dykes.

“We all know what happened to Becky. The news was shocking at the time and women in Lebanon are still living with the repercussions,” Shaima Masri, a university professor in finance accounting, told Arab News.

“Harassment of women on the street is on the rise in light of the current chaos,” she said.

Standing in front of the tent, 11-year-old Fadl listened to an explanation from activists about the importance of the alarm.

He asked to be registered with his mother because he wanted her to have the device.

Fadl told Arab News that he also wanted to get the button because he had previously been harassed in the school playground by two high school boys.

“I ran away and screamed, and the teacher came and the two boys were expelled,” he said.

“Weeks ago, someone in the street tried to chase me, and he was looking right and left while he was chasing me.

“I was afraid and entered a shop. There, I asked the shopkeeper to call my brother, who came and took me from the place. This button will definitely make me feel safe.”

A security source told Arab News that police officers patrolled the Beirut Corniche on bicycles to help protect girls and women from harassment.

One officer, who declined to be named, said: “Women come to us complaining that young men are chasing them all the time, directing shameful words at them, or even trying to touch them. We do our job in protecting them after deterring harassers.”

He added: “But the problem is that women refuse to file a complaint against their harasser because they ‘don’t have time to spend it in the station’ — as they say — or because ‘the incident has passed and the matter is over.’”

He said that Lebanon has passed a sexual harassment law that considers any form of unwanted touching to be harassment and a crime.

“Complaining against harassers is a deterrent so that others will not persist and will understand that there is a punishment now,” he said.

 

 


At Turkiye quake trial, families to seek justice ‘until last breath’

Updated 5 sec ago
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At Turkiye quake trial, families to seek justice ‘until last breath’

  • Sold as “a corner of paradise,” the complex’s abrupt collapse like a house of cards prompted a criminal case against eight defendants which had its third hearing on Thursday
ANTALYA: More than 18 months after a massive earthquake flattened the southern Turkish city of Antakya, the victims’ families have little faith justice will be served but say they will fight “until their last breath.”
With a huge area hit by the February 2023 quake that killed 55,000 people, the luxury Ronesans Residence apartment bloc quickly became a high-profile symbol of the construction malpractice at the heart of the tragedy.
Sold as “a corner of paradise,” the complex’s abrupt collapse like a house of cards prompted a criminal case against eight defendants which had its third hearing on Thursday.
Its list of celebrity residents included former Ghana international footballer Christian Atsu who was one of hundreds who died under the rubble of the structure built in 2013.
Days after the quake, police arrested the building’s contractor at Istanbul airport as he appeared to be fleeing to Montenegro.
Hafize Acikgoz, 43, who lost her husband and three children at the Ronesans complex, said she had “zero hope” that those responsible would be sufficiently punished.
“I don’t have any faith in justice,” she told AFP, saying she thought their apartment block, which towered over those around it, was the safest in the area.
“We were looking down on the buildings nearby.. They stood tall and ours collapsed. My family is under the ground and I am like the living dead,” she said, her eyes full of tears.
Lawyer Emine Candarli, who lives in the western city of Izmir, also lost family in Ronesans, finding the bodies of her sister, her brother-in-law and their two kids embracing each other under the ruins 11 days after the quake.
“It’s not the quake that killed my sister and her family but the contractors who sold the flats as safe and sound,” she told AFP by phone.
“That building is the result of the contractors’ fault.”
Almost all the rubble from the Ronesans complex was cleared away in the weeks after the quake.
AFP journalists visiting the area on Thursday found the site completely flattened with heavy machinery operating there.


Turkish prosecutors are seeking a jail term of 22 years and six months for each of the eight suspects, including contractor Mehmet Yasar Coskun who has pleaded not guilty.
“What would happen if you loaded 30 tons into a 10-ton capacity truck?” he asked the judge on Thursday, via video link.
“This is what exactly happened to our building,” he said, pointing to the intensity and duration of the quake.
The eight suspects are charged with “causing death through conscious negligence.” Four of them are in pre-trial detention, while one is still at large.
But even if the suspects receive the maximum sentence, the families say it will never be enough.
“I will never forgive those responsible,” said Kismet Kosar, 41, who lost her two sisters, their husbands and two nephews at Ronesans.
“I will follow this case until my dying breath ... 22 years for the suspects is not enough,” she told AFP. “We are dying everyday.”
The contractors and project developers insist all the permits were correctly issued after studies by the municipality and the oversight company.
But to the dismay of the families, no municipal official has been called to account over the case as that would require permission from the interior ministry.
“I have tremendous pain which will never be eased,” said Candarli whose sister moved to Ronesans from Izmir after getting married.
“My sister was my other half. We were born on the same day even though I was four years older,” she said.
“She was my birthday gift.”

Health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza says war death toll at 42,847

Updated 24 October 2024
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Health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza says war death toll at 42,847

  • The toll includes 55 deaths in the previous 24 hours, according to the ministry

GAZA CITY, Palestinian Territories: The health ministry in Hamas-run Gaza said on Thursday that at least 42,847 people have been killed in the year-long war between Israel and Palestinian militants.
The toll includes 55 deaths in the previous 24 hours, according to the ministry, which said 100,544 people have been wounded in the Gaza Strip since the war began when Hamas militants attacked Israel on October 7, 2023.


Lebanon needs help to expand army and rebuild, caretaker PM tells Paris summit

Updated 24 October 2024
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Lebanon needs help to expand army and rebuild, caretaker PM tells Paris summit

PARIS: International support will be needed to shore up and expand Lebanon’s army and rebuild the country’s destroyed infrastructure, caretaker Prime Minister Najib Mikati told a Paris conference convened amid Israel’s assault on Hezbollah.
Mikati said the Lebanese government had decided to recruit more troops and could deploy 8,000 soldiers as part of a plan to implement a ceasefire and UN Security Council resolution, which calls for the army to be deployed in southern Lebanon.


Putin says Middle East ‘on brink of full-scale war’

Updated 24 October 2024
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Putin says Middle East ‘on brink of full-scale war’

KAZAN: Russian President Vladimir Putin told a BRICS summit on Thursday that the Middle East was on the verge of full-scale war.
“The military action that started a year ago in Gaza has now spread to Lebanon. Other countries in the region are also affected,” Putin told a meeting in Kazan attended by several world leaders.
“The level of confrontation between Israel and Iran has sharply risen. This is all reminiscent of a chain reaction and puts the whole Middle East on the verge of full-scale war,” Putin said.
Violence in the Middle East will not end until the creation of an independent Palestinian state, Putin said at the summit, attended by Palestinian leader Mahmoud Abbas.
“The key demand for restoring peace and stability on Palestinian territories is carrying out the two-state formula approved by the UN Security Council and General Assembly,” the Russian president said.
He added that this would be “correcting the historical injustice toward the Palestinian people.”
“Until this question is resolved, it will not be possible to break the vicious circle of violence.”


Hamas wants Russia to push Palestinian president toward unity government for post-war Gaza

Updated 24 October 2024
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Hamas wants Russia to push Palestinian president toward unity government for post-war Gaza

  • The Palestinian Authority, the governing body of the occupied Palestinian territories, is controlled by Mahmoud Abbas’ Fatah political faction

MOSCOW: Palestinian militant group Hamas wants Russia to push Palestinian President Mahmoud Abbas to begin negotiations on a national unity government for post-war Gaza, a senior Hamas official told the RIA state news agency after talks in Moscow.
Mousa Abu Marzouk, a Hamas politburo member, met Russian Deputy Foreign Minister Mikhail Bogdanov in Moscow.
“We discussed issues related to Palestinian national unity and the creation of a government that should govern the Gaza Strip after the war,” Marzouk was quoted as saying by RIA.
Marzouk said that Hamas had asked Russia to encourage Abbas, who is attending the BRICS summit in Kazan, to start negotiations about a unity government, RIA reported.
Abbas is head of the Palestinian Authority (PA), the governing body of the occupied Palestinian territories.
The PA was set up three decades ago under the interim peace agreement known as the Oslo Accords and exercises limited governance over parts of the occupied West Bank, which Palestinians want as the core of a future independent state.
The PA, controlled by Abbas’ Fatah political faction, has long had a strained relationship with Hamas, the Islamist movement that runs Gaza, and the two factions fought a brief war before Fatah was expelled from the territory in 2007.
Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu has expressed strong opposition to the PA being involved in running Gaza.