லீநீ மோரிஸ் News Today : Breaking News, Live Updates & Top Stories | Vimarsana
Rosie Duffield wants Keir Starmer to position on trans rights
pinknews.co.uk - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from pinknews.co.uk Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
Pensé que la violación no era algo que le ocurriera a los hombres
laprensa.com.ni - get the latest breaking news, showbiz & celebrity photos, sport news & rumours, viral videos and top stories from laprensa.com.ni Daily Mail and Mail on Sunday newspapers.
BBC News
By Eleanor Lawrie
Alex Feis-Bryce was 18 when he was raped by a stranger at a party.
He had recently come out as gay, and moved from his small town to Manchester to study. I think it was the second time I ever went to a gay bar or pub. My friend and I bumped into some people who invited us to a house party. I was desperately naïve and wanted to make friends and be open with people. I agreed but my friend changed his mind at the last minute.
Alex was driven to the property where he believes he was drugged.
Only one in eight LGBT+ people who are victims of a hate crime report the incident to the police. (Pexels)
Only one in three LGBT+ hate crime victims are able to access the support they need afterwards, according to a new report from LGBT+ anti-abuse charity Galop.
The Galop report, published today on International Day Against Homophobia, Biphobia and Transphobia, found that three in five LGBT+ people who experience a hate crime against them want and need help, but just one of those three people will be able to get the support they need.
Mistrust of the police among LGBT+ people is also a significant factor, with only one in eight who are attacked reporting it to the police. Half of those who didn’t tell the police said that this was because they thought the police wouldn’t do anything, while a third said it was because they were afraid of the police.
Seeing her reflection in the bathroom mirror, Jayne Ozanne recoiled in horror.
It was as if she had staggered from a car wreck: her cheeks were ashen, the skin around her eyes horribly red where blood vessels had burst.
But Jayne hadn t survived a terrible crash, she d merely emerged from a therapy session.
Yet while her appointment had taken place in a cosy sitting room, it was a far from gentle experience.
Because for five hours, Jayne a Cambridge graduate with a highflying business career had been writhing and retching as her therapist , a respected faith leader, urged her to literally vomit out her problem .
vimarsana © 2020. All Rights Reserved.