Woman's Hour - Protests in Turkey, Adolescence, Women in Revolt! exhibition
Episode Date: March 25, 2025Last night saw the fifth night of fierce protests across Turkey, after the main rival politician to the country's President Erdogan, was formally arrested and charged with corruption, having been deta...ined on Wednesday. Ekrem Imamoglu, the mayor of Istanbul, has been declared as the CHP - the Republican People's Party's 2028 presidential nominee - in the last few hours. Women are being seen on the streets in their thousands and Imamoglu's wife, Dilek Kaya Imamoglu, addressed crowds outside of the Istanbul city hall yesterday. Clare McDonnell discusses the situation with the BBC's Emily Wither and Feride Eralp, a feminist activist in Turkey.Since its release, the Netflix TV series Adolescence has caused widespread discussion about what’s shaping our teenagers’ lives. The four-part series follows the fallout from 13-year-old Jamie’s arrest on suspicion of murdering his female classmate, Katie. The show is a critique of social media-boosted toxic masculinity and its role in the teenage experience. Clare discusses the issues with clinical psychologist, Dr Amani Milligan and Consultant Forensic Psychologist, Dr Ruth Tully.The National Crime Agency has launched a month-long social media campaign to combat the threat posed to teenage boys (15-17 years old) by financially motivated sexual extortion or ‘sextortion’. Marie Smith from the National Crime Agency (NCA) and Emma Hardy from Internet Watch Foundation (IWF) explain why this campaign is so urgent. Women in Revolt! Art and Activism in the UK 1970-1990 is a landmark exhibition currently on at the Whitworth in Manchester featuring more than 90 women artists and collectives whose ideas helped fuel the women’s liberation movement during a period of significant social, economic and political change. Clare is joined by Linsey Young, independent curator and researcher who curated the exhibition when she worked at Tate Britain, and Amrita Dhallu, also herself a curator.Presented by Clare McDonnell Producer: Louise Corley
Transcript
Discussion (0)
BBC Sounds music radio podcasts.
Hello, this is Claire McDonald and you're listening to the Woman's Hour podcast.
Hello and welcome to a brand new week on Woman's Hour. Great to have your company.
Netflix drama Adolescence has touched a nerve worldwide. It's now topped streaming charts in 71 countries. The single shot, four-parter, centres on a 13-year-old boy, Jamie, accused
of murdering his female classmate. One episode focuses on the pre-trial assessment between
Jamie and his clinical psychologist. Well, today we'll hear from both a clinical and
forensic psychologist about what it's actually like to be in that room.
Staying with the theme of teenage boys, those aged between 15 and 17, they are the age group
most likely to be targeted by sextortion. That is when an individual is blackmailed with intimate
images, whether fake or genuine. The National Crime Agency today launches a month-long social media campaign.
We'll hear from them. And to a landmark exhibition on in Manchester right now, it's called Women in
Revolt, Art and Activism in the UK, 1970 to 1990. It covers women using art and music as a means
of protest. The curator was inspired by her mum. So tell me this morning,
how has your mum inspired you to revolt, to protest? Or is there a generational flip? Maybe
your daughter or son has inspired you? Tell me all about it this morning. You can text the program.
The number is 84844. Text will be charged at your standard message rate. On social media we are at BBC
Women's Hour and you can email through our website as ever or you can send me a WhatsApp
message or voice note using the number 03700 100444. That text number again 84844. And
speaking of women protesting, let's start this morning with this news. Last night
saw the fifth night of fierce protests across Turkey after the main rival politician to
the country's president Erdogan was formally arrested and charged with corruption having
been detained on Wednesday. We're talking about Ekrem Emamoglu who is the
mayor of Istanbul and has been declared as the CHP, the Republican People's
Party's 2028 presidential nominee just in the last few hours. Erdogan has
condemned the demonstrations and accused the CHP of trying to disturb the peace
and polarise our people. Women are being seen on the
streets in their thousands and Imamolu's wife Dilekkaya Imamolu addressed crowds outside of
the Istanbul City Hall yesterday. Let's talk about this further with the BBC's Emily Wither,
live from Turkey now, along with Turkish feminist activist Feride Erlap, sorry, welcome both of you.
Hello, good morning.
Good morning. Emily, let's start with you. We've seen a lot of footage on social media of women
throughout these protests. We've seen Turkish women demonstrate over fairly specific issues prior to this.
But just give us an idea, what proportion of the protesters did women make up?
I mean, there are many women on the street. I'd say that there's just as many men as there is women.
And for young women in particular, we have to remember that they've only known the rule of one man, President Edwin.
He's been in power now for 22 years,
and they're very worried about what their future looks like.
I think what's interesting about these protests
is that they are drawing in a wide range of people
across the political spectrum.
And when you speak to protesters,
they tell you that they're not on the streets
because of politics,
because they necessarily support the opposition,
but because they are worried
that their country is sinking deeper into autocracy. They say that they're on the streets
fighting for the future of their democracy in Turkey. And, you know, for women, there
are many issues here. Like the economy is in a particularly bad way. And we know that
when it comes to the economy, women are particularly hard hit. Inflation is running at 39% here.
And men's employment pre the economic crisis was actually increasing.
But for women, employment here has decreased.
So we know that women are really hard hit by the economic problems here.
There's also a big problem here with violence against women, particularly femicides.
And I've also noticed going to these demonstrations There's also a big problem here with violence against women, particularly femicides.
And I've also noticed going to these demonstrations that there are women in the crowd who have
brought their children out.
I spoke to one mother who was there with her 11-year-old and she said that she was fighting
for his future because she wanted him to live in a democratic country and she didn't want
to see the country sliding deep
into an authoritarian regime.
So they're speaking up and we're seeing them on the streets. How important are women, Emily,
when it comes to Erdogan's base of support?
So that's a really good question because I think if we look particularly among Muslim
women, they are the ones that have really helped propel him
to power for these last two decades.
Erdogan for years was seen as a hero for Muslim women
because they saw him as their protector
because he scrapped a ban on wearing headscarves
in public institutions in 2013.
But I think after 20 years in power,
many Muslim women say that they fear
the government is
becoming increasingly conservative.
And that doesn't appeal to a younger generation of Muslim women.
They feel that some of their hard fought for rights are now being lost because in order
for President Erdogan to stay in power and to have a majority in the parliament, he's
been pushed towards some extremist coalition partners. And some
Muslim women that I've spoken to say that they feel that the government now is pursuing
anti-gender policies that no longer speak to them. President Erdogan has actually declared
2025 as the year of the family. He wants to instill more traditional values in society
and he thinks women should
have at least three children. And that just doesn't appeal to a lot of young women here.
They don't like to be told what to do. And what is interesting is that it's increasingly
not appealing to a lot of young Muslim women too.
Well let's bring in Feride Alp now. Feride, I guess a lot of what you've just heard from
Emily comes as
no surprise to you at all. Why do you think we're seeing so many women on the streets
of Turkey?
Well, women, it hasn't been these protests alone that have brought women out into the
streets. Emily was very correct in saying that women have been protesting for many,
many years. So there's been longstanding bans against protests in Turkey.
Ever since the Gizeh uprising in 2013, we've seen increasing police oppression, pressure
out on the streets.
Many protests being banned, including March 8, International Women's Day protests, have
been banned consecutively in the last, since 2019, basically.
But despite this, despite all of this pressure on public demonstration, women have basically
been the only force that have actually still been able to keep the streets, been able to
be out on the streets, voice their displeasure and their kind of indignation against everything
going on on the streets in this increasingly
authoritarian climate.
So women know basically probably better than most factions of society here in Turkey what
it means to live under a one-man rule and have been protesting against that one-man
rule.
Particularly we saw this when Turkey withdrew from the Istanbul convention because Erdogan decided one midnight and put out a presidential decree saying we
will leave this convention that protects women from violence against women
and then too we saw major eruption of protests so basically women know that
the streets are the only way to kind of defend our lives and defend our rights.
One of those women we saw on the streets last night in front of City Hall in Istanbul was
the wife of Imam Olu, Dilek Kaya. She was addressing the crowds, she was saying I'm
with you, I stand with you. What do you think to her involvement?
So on the one hand while protests in the streets are very much kind of
dominated by women and women's kind of political representation of their own voices,
when you look at macro politics in women's representation, we see that there aren't really
that much women who have kind of been allowed into that very male space of politics in Turkey.
Very, very low women's representation in Turkey. Very, very low women's representation in parliament,
very, very low women's representation
in municipalities as well.
So it's actually a bit appalling and shocking
that the major opposition party in kind of running
this latest couple of days of protest
have basically almost no women's representation
in kind of in those spaces where speeches are being given.
We see that all the politicians who are kind of addressing the people are all men.
And this also actually says something about the kind of discrepancy between that level
of macro politics and the reality out on the streets, where it's mostly kind of young women out there who are trying to kind of speak
for their lives.
Diliki Mamolo is there in her capacity as the spouse, the wife of Ekremi Mamolo, who
was arrested.
She's becoming an increasingly important political figure and good on her in terms of the way
that she galvanizes and the way that she speaks. But we, of course, as feminists and young
women and women out here have been protesting for many years, believe that women have to
be in politics in a capacity more than the wife of, basically. I think we deserve a lot
more than that and we're going to achieve
a lot more than that.
What's the block then? Why aren't women going into politics? They don't see it as a place
for them or are they being blocked? What's happening?
I mean the patriarchy mostly but also because politics is inexpensive. I mean, Emily was
also talking about how the economic crisis hits women more than anyone, because
women's employment is incredibly low.
In Turkey it's historically never gone over 30 percent, really.
Women are employed in very flexible jobs, in insecure jobs, because also of this notion
of what you explained as the family in traditional
gender roles. So women, even when they go into employment, are seen as a supportive role,
so supporting men who are actually supposed to bring in the bread. But increasingly, that's
really not the case. However, we see that women are not equal in employment, not equal in terms of the education
we receive, and therefore we're not as rich as men, and politics is business for the rich.
And mainstream politics basically does its best to block out women, but the streets are
a different issue, and young women have made their presence felt on the streets.
We are getting reports here that women are being arrested and potentially targeted.
We can't verify those but what can you tell us?
It's quite brutal out there to be honest and the reason why you can't verify it is because
there's a massive crackdown against reporters and women's organizations as well.
All of our Twitter accounts, our social media accounts are being suspended and withheld.
Basically feminist organizations, women's organizations, leftist organizations, news
outlets, independent journalists have been facing not just arrests but also shutdowns
of their accounts.
So they're being prevented from
reporting. So basically it's up to individuals to report the violence that they've been facing.
Their internet kind of bans, so the curtailing of internet has been a serious issue.
People can't access the internet properly in Turkey. That's why you can't verify what's going on. But I can say that in past protests as well,
and in this one, we see intense police violence
and targeted particularly in a very kind of sexist way
towards young women who are out there at night
on the street defying those traditional gender roles.
We've seen women being kicked in the vagina, women being strip searched after being
arrested. It's a form of sexual violence. Strip searches are used, weaponized as a form of sexual
violence. This is all very serious. And the point is to try to intimidate protesters and also young
women as part of those protesters from coming
out and staking a claim to their lives.
Let's go back to Emily finally. Emily, have you heard anything along those lines? What have you witnessed out there as a BBC correspondent?
Well, I have witnessed a lot of violence to try and break up the protests. It doesn't matter if you're a man or a woman, the police are firing tear gas, they're firing pepper spray,
they are launching water cannons,
and they are also arresting a lot of people.
And it's interesting,
because a lot of women protesters that I've spoken to
have said that one of the reasons they're out
is because they don't feel safe in Turkey anymore,
they don't feel safe when it comes to violence against women.
And I'll just pick up
on something that Farideh said there. When Istanbul pulled out of the convention in 2021, that was the law that prevented and combated violence against women. The government here said
that it had been hijacked by people attempting to normalize homosexuality and that it went against
Turkish social and family values,
and they said that domestic laws would protect women instead. And many women over the years have
told me that they don't feel protected by these domestic laws. And actually what we've seen,
now the government don't keep official figures, they're counted instead by women's organizations,
but what we've seen is femicide rising in this country, particularly
in the home. So just last year there were 394 femicides and 258 of them were suspicious
deaths. And I'll never forget a quote that one women's rights expert told me here, and
that was, you know, a lot of women just seemed to accidentally fall from balconies here.
And we know that a lot of the violence does happen in the home here.
So just from March last year to March this year, 239 women were killed by male family members.
So violence against women is a big issue here.
And it is one of the things that are bringing women out onto the streets.
Thank you so much for joining us.
That's the BBC's Emily Wither joining us live from Turkey
and you also heard the voice of Turkish feminist activist Feride Alp undoubtedly a story we
will return to here on Woman's Hour. Now since its release the TV programme Adolescents
has caused widespread discussion around how social media is shaping our
teenagers' lives. For those who haven't yet seen it, the four-part series follows the fallout
from 13-year-old Jamie's arrest on suspicion of murdering his female classmate Katie.
His social media accounts show he had been radicalised by misogynistic posts. His parents
are caught completely unaware.
During the show, Jamie is questioned by a psychologist
in order to understand his feelings towards women
for a pre-trial assessment.
The conversation, at times jovial,
at times strained, and at times angry.
Here's a clip of Erin Doherty,
who portrays psychologist Bryony talking to Jamie
played by Owen Cooper.
I'm interested in what being a man feels like for you.
I don't know. It's too big a question, right?
And the fight's too small a question.
Which is why it's more useful for me to see where the conversation goes and stare it a bit
into what you think of your dad and your granddad for instance. The type of men you think they are rather
than saying so Jamie what do you think being a man feels like? So Jamie what do
you think being a man feels like? It's not a trick, it's just a conversation. So do
you think it would be okay if we speak about your dad a bit?
A clip from the TV show Adolescence produced by Warp Films,
Matriarch Productions and Plan B for Netflix. Joining me now are two women
who know what it's like to be in that room having those difficult conversations.
Dr Amani Milligan, a clinical psychologist and Dr Ruth Tully,
a consultant forensic psychologist. Welcome both of you.
Hi.
Thank you so much for dropping by the Woman's Hour studio. Dr. Romani Milligan, let's start
with you first of all. You did a great TikTok post on this with your professional head on
and you said it ticks so many boxes. What it's like for somebody like you to be there,
what did they get so right?
I think the thing that they touched on really brilliantly is that there are so many different
factors at play.
I think, you know, you see in the interviews when you talk to the, they're talking to the
cast, you know, they didn't want there to be a one thing that you could blame this situation
on.
You know, you saw flaws within the school system, you saw difficulties with their family,
you saw how social media had to, had a play in everything as well.
So the fact that they can show you that there are so many different factors at play here
that interact with each other
and create this unique experience
is something that I think they did really, really well
because this is something that we need to address.
These are things that we need to consider at all levels.
I think part of the reason it's so confronting for people
when they watch the show is that, you know,
this is a quote unquote normal looking boy, you know,
he is quite young looking and quite innocent looking.
And I think a lot of the times when we think about
these kind of horrific violent attacks, you know,
the media and the news around it will be like, you know,
this is an animal, this is a monster,
this is someone that is quite detached from you,
or maybe they'll be speaking about people
who have quite difficult life experiences that, you know outside of the norm quote-unquote so to
see it happen in a you know quite normal looking family typical family is
something I think it brings it home and actually all these factors can also
influence those young people as well not just the ones that we think are outside
of the norm. And easier for us as society to digest.
Yes.
You can put somebody over there.
Absolutely.
It's not in our home, it's over there.
Yeah, you can detach yourself from it as well.
And you can think, you know, this would never happen to me, but it very much can
happen.
And in my experiences, when I'm working with young people, they come from all
walks of life and there are so many different factors at play.
And, you know, it can be quite shocking for young people
and families when they actually become a part of this type of situation because they're
like well how did this happen, what's been happening here and I'm like well quite a few
things at the individual level with the young person but also within the family but also
thinking wider and politically as well. All of these things work together to unfortunately
create these situations. Dr Ruth Tully, an overview from you then on the drama itself and how you think it, because
everybody seems to be saying and anyone who's involved in your line of work with young people
seem to be saying it got the tone right and it got the complexity of what you have to
deal with spot on. Would you agree with that?
I think that's exactly right. There were some procedural things that weren't quite how things would go in real life
but that was overtaken by the tone and the acting which was absolutely amazing.
I would totally agree with all of those things that affect violent
decision-making in terms of it's not just one thing, it's not just about his
experiences within his family or the community or school, it's about all of those things and what's different now which the show
clearly makes a great highlight of is the influence of online activity which as parents
is very different from how we grew up, the urgency of the desire for redress for Jamie and so on and being in that room and what I thought
and what really struck me was showing that psychologist as human as well. We are affected
by the work that we do, it's unusual that you will come across a child who may have murdered
someone who is so young and that is emotionally affecting for us as human beings and psychologists as well. So I thought that was a great touch.
And you do the same type of pretrial assessments as the little snippet we heard there.
And that clip showed the fine line you have to tread.
How hard is it when you're working with somebody who is that young?
And what goes into assessing a young person in that situation?
It's very difficult. So I tend to choose to work with adults at all the stages of the
justice system, but I do work with young people as well. And what struck me and it highlights
there the difficulty is that child was asking for affirmation. He wanted to be liked. Towards
the end of that episode, I'm sure people have seen it if they're tuning in today, he asks do you like me, do you like me and that is so important for him and we can see that played
out in the alleged offence as well. But as a psychologist in terms of maintaining that
professionalism you're told as a person who wants to tell someone they are likeable, they are worthy
of being liked but at the same time trying to remain as neutral as possible to not affect that assessment
you're doing, which needs to be as independent as possible it can be.
And do you do that because she refuses to kind of get drawn in the drama?
Is that something you can't, you can't affirm that if somebody asks you that?
Do you like me?
Absolutely.
I may have said things around, I've enjoyed speaking with you.
It's been a challenge at times.
I might have fed that back quite openly've enjoyed speaking with you, it's been a challenge at times.
I might have fed that back quite openly because clearly it was aggressive during that.
And I think clear feedback in the moment where that doesn't place you at risk is important and addressing that in a transparent way.
So there might have been some things that would help the dynamic and his trusted professionals that wouldn't have compromised my independence that I would have said. But in the moment you've got to make the best decision you can and you're never going to know
what that child or an adult at a later stage of the justice system is going to ask you.
So you've got to respond thinking on your feet which is one of the challenges we face as
psychologists. That certainly portrayed that. Amarni you work with teenage boys so I guess you
see all of these vulnerabilities. What would you say about social media and the impact it's having?
It's having a huge impact.
It's grown to a state now where you don't really know what's going to come upon your
algorithm, and it's very easy for them to get sucked into quite harmful content.
And the thing is, it never really starts with that most extreme point of view.
It would be something around maybe going to know, going to the gym and that
falls, okay, that's fine.
This person is telling me to look after myself.
Okay, that's fine.
And then slowly, but surely you hear more difficult and harmful
speech from that person and they can get sucked in so easily because
it happens so quickly.
The, the, um, for you page and TikTok, for example, is very, is very much designed to suck you in
and keep you engaged in that way.
And at that age, as teenagers,
a lot is happening within the brain,
but also psychologically.
Within the brain, they are more driven for rewards
and there's a higher urge for dopamine,
which means that quick immediacy that you get from TikTok is going to feed them really, really well.
But then also as well, they don't really have the same level of executive
functioning to be able to sort of inhibit that impulse and that want for that
reward. So they're going to be on it for longer.
And then if you put on top of that where they're at psychologically and they're
trying to build their own sense of independence and identity, they're very
much susceptible to messages that tell them about how they should act as a man.
They're going to be looking out for those templates and sort of adhere to those things
because that's the social group that they belong to, so they're going to want a template for that.
So if you think about the kind of where they're at with their brains,
but also where they're at psychologically, all of those things interlink,
which means that social media is a great tool to kind of suck them in.
And they get pushed down, once they start there, misogynistic rabbit holes very often.
What have you noticed there?
I've noticed an increase in kind of the language that I'm seeing that young boys are using
in my time with them.
I'm seeing kind of a lot of sort of sexist slurs, you know,
directed towards their mothers or how they speak about relationships and how they're going to
navigate relationships, again, leans towards that misogynistic side. And, you know, with some
challenging, you can start to pick underneath it. And, you know, a lot of them don't really
understand what they're saying, you know, especially when they're particularly young,
it's sort of something that they've soaked in, it's a message that they've
taken in. And that's what I've been told to think and what, you know, that's what women are like. So
that's true, without any kind of critical thinking behind it. And I guess that's where adults need to
be interested in this and start to think about, you know, what does this actually mean for you and
have those deeper conversations with them. Because if we kind of brush it off or ignore it, or if we are too confronted by it
and get a bit scared of it, which is understandable,
we can then kind of lead them to their own devices,
which can be really, really harmful.
Just want to bring Ruth back in there.
And this is a very key theme that the parents are,
well, we didn't know,
we thought he was safe because he was in the home,
he was upstairs, he wasn't out on the streets,
but it's what you let into your home and what they're accessing. How much do parents do you think know about
their teenagers' lives these days and how can you find out more? Because without alienating
them even further, which is always the tricky balance, isn't it?
Well, it can be very little that parents actually know about what's going on. We feel safe,
we feel that they're safe because they're in the home, but what we don't realise is that people are in our home in
that sense through the internet and they're at this vulnerable age where they're finding
their own identity. And from what I've seen as well, particularly working with sexual
offenders, is that that exposure to not just misogynistic but also sexualised content,
different types of pornography can desensitize young people to what
is expected within sexual relationships and so on. And there's a lot of sexual harm caused by that.
So I think it's about parents being curious and trying to find out it's easier, as was just said,
to ignore. People are scared, people are worried, they don't understand it. But to think,
I can't understand, is going to be a problem, it's going to be a barrier, so be curious. It's also about transparency. If people are covertly trying to monitor what their
children are doing online, that can just foster mistrust. So it's about doing that collaboratively
and in discussion and being curious. But unfortunately we don't have all of the answers. It would be a lot
easier if we did, but so we have to be aware as parents that this
harmful content is out there and at that age it's just so influential about their attachment
patterns, their templates, their healthy relationships and their attitudes. And once attitudes are
formed and it does become attitudinal, those things are much more difficult to change.
Harder to move on from. Amani, this programme has been even discussed in Parliament. Keir Starmer said that we need to tackle the emerging and growing problem
raised by the programme and as you said it's multi-factorial but if we were to
start with one thing where should we start? I think we need to educate
ourselves. Yeah I think we need to think a little bit more around kind of
development and relate to our own experiences
as teenagers. What was it like actually, even though we didn't have the same landscape of social
media, I think we can relate to that idea of wanting to be liked or you know our social circus
being really important. So kind of engaging with our young people in that way is really,
really important. But it is multifactorial and I think in terms of a sort of political
standpoint there needs to be policies that will support you know schools to
have the education that they need you know whether that's for PSHE or
sexual classes we need to think a little bit around funding as well you know how
do we fund the services schools charities, charities, youth centers, etc.
to be able to have the resources in place to be able to support families and young people
to engage in these conversations as well.
So on a political level, there needs to be policy and resources available for everybody
to be able to do this.
Thank you both so much for coming in.
Such a fascinating discussion.
And again, it will continue because of the
popularity of this particular program. Dr. Armani Milligan, clinical psychologist
and Dr. Ruth Tully, a consultant forensic psychologist. If you'd like to
join in the debate on that one you can. You can text the program our number is
84844. Now staying with the theme of vulnerable teenagers, we move from perpetrators to victims.
The National Crime Agency has launched a month-long social media campaign targeting teenage boys
aged 15 to 17. Why are they doing that? Well, it's to draw attention to the rising cases
of financially motivated sexual extortion or sextortion. This is when victims
are blackmailed into paying money after an offender threatens to release nude or semi-nude
photos of them. It could be a real photo taken by the victim and shared online or even a fake image
created of them by the offender. The National Crime Agency's Child Exploitation and Online Protection Unit
received 380 reports of sex-dorsion in 2024. But they say these cases are generally under-reported
and the actual figure is likely to be much higher. The aim of the social media campaign is to teach young boys
how to report this crime and support them to know that when
it happens, it is never their fault. I'm joined by Marie Smith, Senior Manager at the NCA's
Child Exploitation and Online Protection Command. Welcome to the program.
Good morning.
And Emma Hardy from the independent not-for-profit organization Internet Watch Foundation. Morning,
Emma.
Good morning. Okay let's
start with you Marie Smith. Let's start with what sex extortion is and if you
could move in a little bit further to the microphone that would be great.
Yes of course. So we have been seeing a real increase in reports of young males
being targeted by kind of people abroad. So these are criminals who are targeting males worldwide to get them
to share indecent images, these are often nude images of themselves. What they'll then
do is threaten them that they will release these images to everybody that they know,
their school, their friends, their parents. They'll show them that they have those details.
So it's quite easy to be able to find that information online and then they'll blackmail them for money so this is
purely financial gain and what they're looking for is either money or some kind
of financial demand or reward so gift cards are quite popular for instance.
And the driver there is shame isn't it? It's exactly what we were just talking
about in our previous discussion you know you say to a teenage boy I'm going
to publicly humiliate you that will send them into a spiral
Won't it completely so they're tapping into the vulnerability that young boys particularly are less likely to report any type of
Criminality or abuse of any kind they're tapping into that and they're really pushing on that shame and humiliation
So if that's to go out there
How would that make you feel they They're really, really callous in
how they're approaching these young males. They absolutely have no care consideration
for their life. So we have sadly seen a number of young boys who have died by suicide of
effects. We've had three cases in the UK now. There's been a number in the US, I think they're
hitting over 20. So it's an extremely serious crime and they will actually tell young
people that that's what they need to do should they not meet this financial demand.
So what you're doing is flushing this out in the open and saying this isn't you and listen to this.
So how is this campaign going to run?
Completely. So we're running for a month on social media platforms, predominantly in the environments that the young people are,
or some of this crime is happening,
so within Snapchat and Instagram for instance. We're keeping it really simple so we're not using
the term sextortion. We ran and we kind of commissioned research before this campaign
that looked at young people's or young males attitudes particularly towards it. We were
finding that 74% couldn't explain what sextortion was when asked, 74% as well
didn't see it as a request for a nude image as an attempt of sextortion and 43% didn't
know where to report.
So that's really concerning to us, particularly as law enforcement, that if this was to happen,
usually through the night, so this is times when parents or carers are not available or
unaware of what's happening, that they just
didn't know where to go. It's really important for us as law enforcement that we're saying
this as well because the tactics that are used by offenders, what they're saying to
them is you've basically broken the law. So what you've done is you've shared a nude
image of yourself, that's an indecent image, and you've broken the law so you will get
in trouble. They can't find me, we're based abroad but you're there and
if you were to report this then you're going to be criminalised.
So you're switching it around. Let's bring in Emma Hardy. I mean I was
surprised Emma that it was young teenage boys because often when you think of
this you think it's girls that are the most vulnerable. Why are teenage boys
the biggest
sector of this problem?
Yeah, thank you. So I'm from the Internet Watch Foundation and we are the UK body working
internationally to find and remove images and videos of child sexual abuse. And it's
absolutely the case that most of our work revolves around sexual imagery of girls and that is what we see being most
heavily distributed on the internet and we were absolutely shocked when we
launched a reporting service with Childline called Report Remove for young
people. We wrongly presumed that it would be girls who would use this service
the most and it wasn't. It was boys, it is consistently boys
and I'm so pleased we're able to fulfil this gap but what that is a sign of is that boys
are being targeted online. They're incredibly vulnerable and the methods by which this is
going about, so boys may well be targeted and think that they are starting a conversation
of somebody on the internet that they might have a sexual relationship with. They are duped into sending a nude and then that gets played back to them and I'm so delighted that
the NCA is running this campaign and at the Internet Watch Foundation because we see the imagery
once it's been reported through, just to paint you a picture, that young man will be sent back to him his own nude image
against perhaps a profile picture of his social media in a collage and also a
screen grab of his social media contacts or perhaps it's going to be his school.
So it's put together as a collage, it's played back to him and very often we'll
see written text scrawled across the top. So imagine someone's just writing text
and it will have a threat on that text and normally the threat will suggest that
that young man himself is sexually attracted to children and that he's actually sexually
abused a child. And that is what they're being threatened with going out onto the social
media platforms. So you could imagine, gosh, that young man
alone in probably a bedroom and not knowing what to do. And this is why we're seeing young
men being driven to take their own lives. But what Report Remove can do is it enables
that young person to be able to report it anonymously, directly through to us in the
Internet Watch Foundation, and we can create a digital fingerprint
of that image, get it out to tech platforms and prevent that image from going up on the
internet and it's a complimentary, I guess empowering method that that young person can
take alongside ensuring that they are reporting it appropriately to the police as well and
see off as Marie has just explained.
Yeah, I mean that's fantastic work that you're doing and Marie this is the whole point isn't
it? It's saying this is the truth, you haven't committed a crime, you've been the victim
here. So how are you hoping this campaign is going to change that in the minds of young
people because you really need these young boys to come forward and
Not be shamed and say this has happened to me agree. It's the tip of the iceberg
We know that we want them to and in this campaign what we're saying to them is don't pay
So that can be really challenging because if you're in a situation when someone's telling you if you give me 30 pounds
This will stop it won't make it stop. The more you, you know,
they know that you can pay, they will continue to ask you to pay. So please don't pay, stop
all contact, block the individuals and ensure that you report. So making some really clear
definitions of what to do in that situation as they were in the commission's research,
very unaware of what to do. So it's very practical advice, really simple advice and hopefully we're just going to reach
as many young males as possible.
Yeah, I mean what about going into schools with this? It seems like such a
brilliant campaign and so needed.
We do. We have a number of resources in schools. So we're a COP education. We run
education programs from age 4 to age 18 within schools around the topics of
relationships, online child sexual
abuse. We are currently creating an online blackmail resource for launch into schools
in September that will cover this financial element and also the other side of the camp
for sexual gratification as well. So yes, alongside this, we've also launched guidance
for parents and carers. So if you're listening to this, your parent or carer, go to see up education, share it in your WhatsApp groups, send it to your schools
and there's some really comprehensive information on how do you have that conversation with
your child. It can be tricky. It can be slightly awkward, but go for it. You won't regret it.
Emma, just a final word to you. I mean, it's to say there's lots of themes running through
the program when we were talking about the drama adolescence a short time ago and how social media factors into real life outcomes, often tragic. I mean, what about
internet service providers? What about the platforms that are allowing this content to
be put up, to be communicated? What needs to change there?
Well, I think we need to wait to see the impact of the Online Safety Act. These platforms
have to prevent this type of imagery from circulating. They have to make sure it's
supported and it's taken down. Platforms need to design their tools safely in the first
place and there is a lot more work that needs to be done. And the thing I will highlight
is where the conversation starts on the internet is not necessarily
where that imagery is then shared.
And we are concerned about heavily encrypted parts of the internet where young people are
moved to so that these conversations, the image shared, can take place without that
platform itself knowing.
Parents talking little and often to young people in their lives about online safety is simply the best thing, the best parent care of
superpower that there is. They really need to be having these conversations in
order that their young people in their lives will tell them if something goes
wrong. It's been brilliant having you both on. Thank you so much. Such an important
topic. You heard the voice there of Emma Hardy from Internet Watch Foundation
that's an independent not-for-profit organization and Mary Smith senior manager at the NCA's
Child Exploitation and Online Protection Command. Thank you both very much for dropping by
to the Warmers Hour studio. Now last Tuesday Nula was joined by three UK pop legends,
Mutia, Buena, Keisha, Buchanan and Siobhan Donohue,
better known as the Sugar Babes.
They achieved six number one singles
and have been nominated for six Brit Awards,
winning for Best Dance Act in 2003.
It was a while ago now.
They started their music career together in 1998.
But after Siobhan left the band in 2001,
there were several line-up changes and it wasn't until 2019 that they came back together
as the Sugar Babes. They now have a brand new single, Jungle, and are getting ready for their
biggest ever UK and Ireland tour, which kicks off in Leeds next month. Here's a short extract.
Nuala asked them, what is a Sugar Babe? What is a Sugar Babe?
Next month, here's a short extract. Nuala asked them, what is a sugar babe?
What is a sugar babe?
Good question.
I mean, the thing is, it is a complex past.
But I think that for a lot of people, they move jobs.
Different things happen in your life.
Since 1998, quite a few.
The journey is what it is.
And we actually got together when we were 12 and 13.
So I think the idea that everything would have just been hunky dory until now, you know,
that's just not how life goes. But I,
so I would say that we don't regret our journey actually. I'm, I'm,
I'm glad it's led us here. Let's talk about that though.
So what age were you when you started your career? All of us were 12 and 13.
I mean it's so, I know babies. If I
hear about someone working, starting to work at that age now, I'm like your brain hasn't
fully formed. But it was something that we wanted to do, like our parents were so supportive
and not a lot of people know this but we actually, we all sort of grew up together basically.
Michelle and I went to school together and singing in the studio was like our after school hobby. And so it was sort of like very, very organic. And then things just started to move.
You know, for us, people would come into the studio, hear us sing, and then all of a sudden
there was a label deal in front of us, you know. So I think for us, it was always about
keeping it as organic as possible. The more famous you become, the more success you have,
it becomes something else to other people. So for us coming back together is about bringing it back to sort
of the essence of what we were, which is just friends that grew up together who liked music.
And that's it. Not about the rest of this stuff.
Of which there was so many. I mean, people, you were teenagers, as he says, not even teenagers
actually when you started, even pre-teens really. And like many other teenagers or pre-teens, you fell out with
one another. But for you, fallouts were tabloid fodder, whether it was allegations of feuds
or bullying, for example. But people might be wondering, how do you leave all that behind,
that intense scrutiny, which must be very difficult to go through at a young age in
the public eye, and come back and say, you know what, we're going on tour
together.
I think we just rise above it. I think that a lot of what people have read isn't actually
kind of what went down and life is more kind of nuanced know there's more context to it than what people would
ever have known or heard and you know only we know our past and our true story and you
know we bring it back to the music and what we love and it's been important for us to
make it about that because the legacy is so incredible. You know it's women in particular
in this industry that kind of you know it becomes more about the gossip and what they look like and blah, blah, blah.
You know, we want it to be about the music and our art.
Fantastic.
Sugar Babes, they are out on tour soon and you can hear that interview in full if you
want to.
Just go to BBC Sounds and Woman's Hour and look up Tuesday, the 18th of March.
So a landmark exhibition on in Manchester right now, it's called Women in Revolt,
Art and Activism in the UK 1970 to 1990. It's currently on at the Whitworth and features more
than 90 women artists and collectives whose ideas help fuel the women's liberation movement during
a period of significant social, economic and political change. Now it includes themes of maternal and domestic experiences, anti-racism and LGBTQ plus activism,
Greenham Common of course, and the peace movement and punk and independent music.
It's all in there.
First shown at the Tate Britain in London in 2023, the exhibition highlights the ways
in which women challenge societal norms through their
creativity both collectively and independently, using their lived experiences to create art
and fight injustice.
Delighted to say I'm joined in the Womens' Hour studio by Lindsay Young, independent
curator and researcher who cura- can't even say that word, too many curators in that one
sentence who curated the exhibition
when she worked at Tate Britain and Amrita Dalloo, researcher and writer who contributed
to the catalogue for Women in Revolt. Welcome both of you.
Thank you.
Thank you.
It's great to have you here, it really, really is. Lindsay, tell us about Women in Revolt,
the thinking behind this exhibition. I think we should start with your mum. She was your
inspiration. Yeah, so there are two kind of main reasons I made the exhibition and the first was I wanted
to make a present for my mum. So my mum was called Gail Stewart and she died five years ago, yesterday
actually, at the age of 64. And she was a nurse, she was a single mum, she was incredibly left-wing,
she lived with a chronic illness, she was a carer,
and she was a waspy woman. So her life was really touched by so many things that affect
ordinary women. But she was also incredible and amazing and beautiful and funny and a
real inspiration. And I really felt that society didn't see or celebrate that kind of post-war
generation of women. And so I wanted to put
them in the spotlight and to give them a public platform to show kind of how they've made
our lives richer and allowed the next generation of feminists to come through. And then the
second reason was that I was working at Tate in this really privileged position as curator
of British art, but I realized I didn't know British art. I knew white men's British art because that's what I'd been taught. And having grown up with
this amazing single mum in a kind of socialist environment, I knew about the
socio-political context and I thought there must be feminist artwork by UK
artists out there. So I went to find it really.
And did your mother protest? I mean, was she out on the streets or did she do it in other ways?
No, my mum always called herself a reluctant feminist. I think she wanted an easier life than she got. But she was
deeply,
she cared deeply about social justice. She'd worked at the height of the AIDS epidemic.
She'd worked with patients in London when other nurses wouldn't see them and she
hadn't embodied feminism, I would say, rather than than and also she didn't have time you know she
was looking after me and looking after you. Bringing up the next generation of
feminists. And Rita let's pick up what Melinzy said there you know there is
that kind of the arts of social justice it's very male up to that point up to
the Tate exhibition another one at the Whitworth, but also very white.
So how have you contributed to this exhibition?
So I wrote an exhibition essay for the catalogue and I was talking about my experience of seeking
all of these women that I knew existed but had no idea about them. So I grew up in Birmingham,
half of my family are from East Midlands, but even when I actually entered into the formal art history
training, nobody told me about any trace of these women. They were nowhere to be
found and there was this watershed moment for me where I went to the Stuart
Hall Library and I found this compendium that was made by the artist Maud
Salter who's in the show and And she wrote this anthology called Passion
where she documented all of the black
and South Asian women artists, actors, spoken word, poets,
musicians, everyone from Mira Sayal and Bernardine Everisa
to all of the women that featured in the show.
She made this anthology because she knew no one
would be documenting their work
and she made this anthology with passion. and so my interest is really in finding all of the
substantial evidence that suggests that all of these women came before me even
though everyone told me that I basically existed in my own vacuum and what's
really interesting about all of the ephemera that's in the show especially
about the black women and South Asian women
artists, was that it shows that they actually had to create the whole worlds and structures
within which the art existed. So they couldn't just be artists, but they had to be their
own curators and gallerists and publicists. So I'm really interested in building that
whole picture and making sure that these things don't happen again.
Well, you're doing a great job. Who you found, I'm just interested to know who really leapt
out at you and thought it's a crying shame that no one's known about this person before.
Well, I have to say, I always have to shout out LaBeynne, I mean, because even though
I think that she's probably really well known and she's literally just been announced to
that she's going to be representing Britain at Venice Biennale. I think the whole prolific aspect of her work,
especially as an artist curator in the 80s, has completely gone amiss and she
curated an exhibition called The Thin Black Line and it's its 40th anniversary
and this happened at the ICA and she invited 11 black women artists to take up, she wanted them to
take up space in the whole gallery but she was given the thinnest corridor that
led to the toilet but best believe these women took up space and they made sure
that all of the walls from floor to ceiling were covered in their art. I also
just wanted to quickly shout out Pratiba Palmer as well, a queer South Asian filmmaker
and documentary maker whose work is in the final to last room and she honestly, that
was really inspiring to see her work.
I can't wait to go to the room in Manchester a lot so I'm definitely going along to this.
Lindsay, before I get on to talk a bit about the kind of Manchester element to this and
how you make it relevant to the North, what about you, if you had to pick a piece from this exhibition, which is yours?
I mean, that's a big question. We cover a lot. The show features works from 1970 through
to 1990, so it really kind of runs the whole gamut. But I would probably have to say a
poster by Sea Red Collective. So it's a screen printed poster, really bright, really
beautiful colors. And it's an image of Margaret Thatcher, who haunts the exhibition, I must
say. So it's an image of Margaret Thatcher when she's just become Prime Minister. And
in the frame around her, there's text listing all the things that she's done that are negative
to women. So right by, you know, closing women's
hospitals, cutting nursery places. And then above this image, the text says a message
to the women of our nation and out of her mouth, there's a speech bubble that says,
tough. And I think that the directness of that is really special, but also because it
was made by a collective. So that was a
group of women working together who weren't interested in financial gain, they were interested
in making amazing things in an affordable way that had a political and social impact.
And have you had to look at how you kind of draw the eye of someone up north to this exhibition
because there's a rich history, isn't there, of kind of social protest in and around Manchester?
Of course, there's a hugely rich history and there's also a rich curatorial history.
There's a really important curator called Jill Morgan who worked in Rochdale and La Beina, in fact, worked up there as well.
And it's often the case with the research I did, I worked on this for six years and spent three years travelling the country,
looking under beds, looking in cupboards. And it's often the case.
We were talking about in Manchester, why, you know, what is there around there that
you're going to specify in this exhibition?
So we're looking at, yeah at artists from all over the country.
And the kind of key ones for Manchester, I would say,
are Linder.
So there's a really great video of Linder
performing at the Hacienda with her band Ludas.
And the Hacienda used to serve meat pies.
And she's a committed lifelong vegetarian.
So she wore a dress made of meat.
This is like decades before Lady Gaga and performed in this dress in protest. She was not first. And the other
would be perhaps Margaret Harrison. So Margaret Harrison is an artist who lives in Cumbria
and she taught in Manchester. She was the first woman to teach at the School of Art.
And we have a huge sculpture that is a recreation of an element of the Greenham Common Fence and another would be Claudette Johnson. So Claudette Johnson is
from Manchester and she was nominated for this year's Turner Prize and was
also a really really important artist in the black British art movement at the
beginning. We've had so many people getting in touch I'm just going to drop
a few of these in here we're asking people whether they've been inspired by
their mothers to protest. Sarah in Birmingham says I'm a 61 year old woman, my daughter
is 27 and I'm proud to say she has a social conscience. I've always spoken out
about social injustice. We learn from each other, I've raised her that way. We
share stories and information both historic and present. I'm heartbroken
about current injustices around the world and let's just drop this one on
quickly. Ailish says my relatives who were suffragettes inspired me to protest women's rights. I've
always been a feminist and always will be for the rest of my life. I attended my
first International Women's Day march on the 8th of March this year. Well done
Ailish. My mum called me her little activist in about 20 seconds. Can you
tell me, Amrita, why people should go along to this?
I think people need to go see this show to know, if they're creative practitioners in the loosest term,
to know that they're not alone and that they can feel the rage and joy in their creative expression.
And Lindsay, what do you think your mum would think about this?
Oh my god, she was a show-off so she would have really really loved it.
Fantastic it's been wonderful having you both in. Lindsay Young, independent
curator and researcher who created the exhibition we've been talking about and
Amrita Dhali, researcher and writer who you've just had contributed to the
exhibition Women in Revolt and it's on at the Whitworth in Manchester until the
1st of June and even, it is free to enter.
So no excuse, get along there.
Thank you both, been an education it really has.
Join me again tomorrow for Woman's Hour.
We'll be discussing how the gig economy
impacts migrant women,
especially those providing social care.
And we'll be hearing from the campaigners
who are hoping the next Secretary General of the UN
might be a woman.
Talk to you tomorrow at 10.
That's all from today's Woman's Hour. Join us again next time. You could hear the plants photosynthesising. A place of audio beauty and joy,
with emotion and human experience at its very heart.
You can see the people walking, bewildered, absolutely bewildered.
Nobody really knew what to think.
The programmes you'll find here explore the reality of contemporary Britain and the world.
It's a chance to meet voices that are not normally heard.
You don't open your mouth.
If you tell one person, that's it.
Illuminated from BBC Radio 4.
All human life is here, just waiting to be discovered.
Listen on BBC Sounds.