Sign up for the latest from M.E.N. political editor Jennifer Williams Women in Greater Manchester and across the country have been sharing their experiences of vulnerability at the hands of men in the wake of Sarah Everard’s death.
Not only about sexual harassment and sexual assault, but the burdens that women must carry on a daily basis, such as being frightened to walk alone.
Conversations have ignited among both sexes, with an awakening to the extent sexism and gendered violence have been normalised and ingrained in our culture.
Now, campaigners are calling for an end to everyday misogyny - and for Manchester to lead the way in change. Everard, 33, was walking home from a friend’s house on March 3 just after 9 pm when she vanished from
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