Pakistan Today

Is #MeToo a viral buzz or a tipping point for social change?

From film sets, international aid agencies, parliaments to businesses, revelations of sex abuse scandals have sent shockwaves around the world, with women sharing their experiences through the #MeToo campaign.
Sparked last year by accusations of sexual misconduct by Hollywood mogul Harvey Weinstein, the #MeToo campaign has highlighted United Nations data that one in three women worldwide has experienced physical or sexual violence.
Ahead of International Women’s Day on March 8, Reuters asked women’s rights experts whether the #MeToo movement is just a social media buzz or whether it will lead to lasting change for women.
“If it’s going to be a tipping point, we need to make it the tipping point. Social media in and of itself won’t create the kind of structural, cultural and social change that we need to end sexual harassment.
“By its nature, it’s a movement and a platform and a space that allows some women the opportunity to speak up and that’s really important. There are obviously limits to it.
“Not everyone is empowered to speak out, not everyone is able to tell their story publicly. It’s always incumbent on us to watch out for the gaps — who’s not part of this conversation? whose voice isn’t being heard? — and find ways to tell those stories and engage those women as well.”
“The moment we are in will have some lasting changes – victims of harassment and assault now know that they are not alone and that their experiences are valid, while predators can no longer pretend their actions are ‘boys being boys’.
“But even now, in the middle of the #MeToo movement, there are women and men who are experiencing harassment and assault. They are not famous and they don’t have an audience to support them or lift them up, and they are not likely to receive anything like justice.”
“#MeToo has been integral to breaking the silence and raising understanding about the breadth, depth and general acceptance of the misogyny that permeates society.
“The fact that mainstream media is covering sexual assault, harassment and discrimination as worthwhile stories — on the front page instead of page 26 — is a clear and tangible shift.
“The isolation and silence of victims and survivors has been empowering to perpetrators who have been able to act with impunity. The experiences shared through #MeToo has shone a spotlight on just how pervasive this impunity has been.”

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