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Sign this petition for Valerie's Law - mandatory training for police supporting Black domestic violence victims - before Sunday

96 replies

JuliaMumsnet · 28/10/2021 15:24

Hello

We’re popping our heads through the door to point you towards this petition by Black domestic violence charity Sistah Space which closes on Sunday.


It calls for Valerie’s Law: Compulsory Training for Agencies Supporting Black DV Victims. Here’s more from Charnelle from Sistah Space about why this is needed.

Who is Valerie?
"Valerie Forde and her 23-month-old daughter (see photo) were brutally murdered by Valerie’s ex-partner Roland McKoy in 2014. Six weeks prior to their murder, Valerie reported McKoy’s threats to police but this was carelessly recorded as a threat to property rather than a threat to life.

Valerie had given her ex-partner until the 31st of March to leave their home for a fresh start for the family in April.

Weeks later on March 31st, Valerie phoned her then 28-year-old daughter at work in fear of her ex-partner’s suspicious behaviour in the house. Her daughter ended up hearing on the phone as her mother and sister’s lives were needlessly and violently taken. After hearing the screams and ringing 999 on a coworker’s phone, the police arrived in 6 minutes but left because they had allegedly knocked and no one answered. The police then returned and took over 10 minutes to break down the door. Overall, entry to the home allegedly took 40 minutes since the call to 999 was made. The question remains: had the police entered the home upon initial arrival, would both Valerie and baby Jahzara have lost their lives?

Understanding Cultural needs
As seen in Valerie’s case and with many other domestic violence victims, police officers and relevant agencies have a severe knowledge gap when it comes to the black community and its domestic violence victims. As with every culture, the black community has a plethora of colloquialisms, languages and customs within itself that must be acknowledged and understood in mainstream institutions to better protect black women fleeing violence. Government agencies that serve diverse communities have a responsibility to educate their service providers about the people they are designated to protect and not rely on standard White-British customs as the norm. Without a basic understanding of these cultural differences, it is impossible for police officers and service providers to ensure black women are equally protected in the United Kingdom.

Valerie’s Law advocates for mandatory Cultural Competency training that accounts for the cultural nuances and barriers, colloquialisms, languages and customs that make up the diverse black community. Valerie’s Law will enable police officers, relevant government agencies and domestic violence safehouse staff to acknowledge and protect black women in abusive situations through an understanding. The training would equip service providers with basic knowledge such as the below.

Why training is needed

  • Black skin complexions vary across an extremely wide spectrum and because of that, not all Black people’s skin will bruise the same as their white counterparts. As such, bruises cannot be used as a benchmark of the scale of an injury or how violent a situation is.


  • Culturally, a threat can be communicated in a variety of ways in Black culture. Colloquially and contextually; the same words said amongst white communities can be and will be shown with very different intentions and received with very different understandings​


  • Risk assessment questions should reflect the cultural environment of Black women to better understand the danger they are facing


  • Common stereotyping and unconscious bias of Black people must be understood and learned so that it is not reflected in a service providers’ ability to help DV victims.


  • Cultural Competency training could easily be integrated as a part of service providers standard training and would save lives of thousands of black women escaping domestic violence. Some agencies have already started to implement this, including police stations and hospitals that have received specialised training from our Sistah Space team. If the appropriate cultural training had been in place sooner across all agencies. Valerie and her infant daughter may still be with us today."


The petition is here - please sign before Sunday and get in touch with Sistah on twitter here and instagram here.

Thanks so much

MNHQ
Sign this petition for Valerie's Law - mandatory training for police supporting Black domestic violence victims - before Sunday
Sign this petition for Valerie's Law - mandatory training for police supporting Black domestic violence victims - before Sunday
OP posts:
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TheBlackDarner · 28/10/2021 18:07

Thanks Julia. Already signed and supporting Sistah Space.

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NotSoNewAndShiny · 28/10/2021 19:36

Signed!

Sorry if I've missed any detail...Wondering if there's a reason this is on this board only. Haven't seen it anywhere else and almost missed it here too. Is it just for Black women to sign and support? @JuliaMumsnet

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NotSoNewAndShiny · 28/10/2021 19:39

Oh, I've just seen it on the Feminism chat board.

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TheBlackDarner · 28/10/2021 20:42

@NotSoNewAndShiny It's linked across boards.( As it shoud be) I looked too. Smile

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CorrBlimeyGG · 28/10/2021 20:46

I can't believe this hasn't reached 100,000 signatures. 'All lives matter', right?

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NotSoNewAndShiny · 28/10/2021 20:59

Oh thanks @TheBlackDarner Smile

I've only seen it linked here, the Campaign board and one of the Feminism boards. Just wondered if it would help to put it up on more boards, unless I'm mistaken and it's just not showing on mine.

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NotSoNewAndShiny · 28/10/2021 21:02

@CorrBlimeyGG

I can't believe this hasn't reached 100,000 signatures. 'All lives matter', right?

That's what I'm thinking. Can't see it showing on the other Feminism board, Relationship, Parenting, even AIBU and Chat (for traffic). Or isn't it meant to be?
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MrsTerryPratchett · 28/10/2021 21:04

Can it be stickied to the tops of topics?

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AwkwardSquad · 28/10/2021 21:06

Signed. Thank you, Julia

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TheBlackDarner · 28/10/2021 21:07

I thought it was on all boards! Sad

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MrsTerryPratchett · 28/10/2021 21:08

@TheBlackDarner

I thought it was on all boards! Sad

Maybe it is but nit at the top.
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applechips · 28/10/2021 21:10

Signed. Keeping women safe matters, and it’s important to make sure that training for these situations is as robust and fit for purpose as possible.

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NotSoNewAndShiny · 28/10/2021 21:15

@TheBlackDarner

I thought it was on all boards! Sad

Can't see it everywhere, just on those three, but have only checked several boards, not all. And it could just be my phone not showing the link.
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TheBlackDarner · 28/10/2021 21:16

It's on the petitions board, which is in the Classified section. Hard to find if you don't know I think.
(I think there was a thread about petitions earlier in the year?)
www.mumsnet.com/Talk/petitions_noticeboard

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NotSoNewAndShiny · 28/10/2021 21:20

Yes I saw it there. That's what I meant by the Campaign board (as in Mumsnet Campaigns). Sorry, didn't realise that's the board you were referring to.Smile

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TheBlackDarner · 28/10/2021 21:24

You are right Im wrong.
Surey it should be in Relationships and also the multi cultural families board at least. I'm going to report the pinned post and ask.

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NotSoNewAndShiny · 28/10/2021 21:27

Ah yes that board too. Silly me, I didn't think to report the post and contact them - great idea.

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GrouchyKiwi · 28/10/2021 21:28

Have signed and shared.

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TheBlackDarner · 28/10/2021 21:35

Done.

Please sign, this poice report was originally recorded as a crime against property. Shameful Angry

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Medicaltextbook · 28/10/2021 21:37

Ive signed as I think there are a lot of cases of BAME women not treated well in the system. This refuge article also has evidence that should shock but maybe doesn’t- Black women 14% less likely to be referred to a special service. When a black woman attends to report DA the police assume it is her white friend with her who is the victim despite the black woman already speaking on the phone.

www.refuge.org.uk/refuge-better-protection-of-black-women-domestic-abuse/

I think one issue just with signatures (not the importance of the cause) may be that the description (taken from Sistah Space website) does not explain how Valerie’s case particularly reflects an experience that would have been different for a white woman. The police recorded her report as property crime. Was this because she may have used different language and the police were not trained to recognise it? Did the police give up trying to enter much sooner than if it was a white victim?

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Medicaltextbook · 28/10/2021 21:40

I haven’t had email to confirm signature- did it come through fast for other people?

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NotSoNewAndShiny · 28/10/2021 21:44

Yes, mine did immediately. Have you checked your Spam folder?

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TheBlackDarner · 28/10/2021 21:45

Yes. it did Medicaltextbook, (excellent post)
I got a relative here to sign earler viamy laptop and it was through in seconds to their email.
(It seems to have gone up by nearly 2000 signatures since then.)

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Waitwhat23 · 28/10/2021 21:46

There was a thread about this on the Sex and Gender board in September - I've just bumped for visibility again.

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Medicaltextbook · 28/10/2021 21:50

Still haven’t had it, not in Spam but it says might take 24 hours - maybe a good sign if there are lots of people signing. If I haven’t had anything tomorrow morning I’ll chase it up.

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