“Any criminal event or incident which is perceived by the victim or any other person, to be motivated by hostility or prejudice towards someone based on a personal characteristic,” (Victim Support)Victim Support. PAVO signed up as early adopters of the Hate Crime Charter pledging to help raise awareness and support victims.
Hate Crime Awareness Charter |
Race
According to Victim Support race related hate crimes are some of the most commonly reported crimes to the police. Hate crime that is racially driven targets someone because of their skin colour, ethnicity, language and culture. There’s been a recent increase in racially motivated Hate Crime in Wales with attacks on refugee camps in Penally in September last year.
Religion and Faith
Religious Hate Crime is crime that is based on belief, attacking someone for their faith in and worship of a God / Gods or for their lack of belief. Attacks can be on a place, person or group of people, with the attack having an impact on core belief systems. Statistically attacks on people of Muslim and Jewish faiths are most common and incidences reported by the media can influence trends or spikes such as the attacks on a Mosque in Christchurch, New Zealand in 2019.
Sexual Orientation
Sexually orientated Hate Crime
attacks someone for their sexual preferences, it can manifest in the form of
heterosexism, biphobia or homophobia depending on whether someone is
heterosexual, bisexual, gay or lesbian.
Sexual Orientation Hate Crime |
Transgender
Transgender related Hate Crime is
connected to the gender that someone identifies with. Gender dysphoria is the
term used to describe the sense of unease experienced by an individual where
their gender identity at birth differs from the gender that they identify with.
In some instances individuals choose to be gender fluid or gender neutral. Some
choose to transition from their given gender to their chosen gender this
transition can be social, legal or medical. Any attack on someone because of
their gender is known as a transphobic attack. According to Victim Support, Transgender Hate Crime is the least common crime reported to the police, yet these crimes are also showing an increase.
Disability
Hate Crime related to Disability
can take many forms, it can attack hidden disabilities such as sensory loss,
mental health or learning disabilities, as well as visible disabilities such as
physical impairments. It can take the form of bullying but can also be
insidious disguised as friendship, known as 'Mate Crime,' or 'Cuckooing,' where the
victim is manipulated or coerced and then taken advantage of. According to Victim Support the number of disability related Hate Crimes continues to rise each year.
✯In 2019, Ability Today worked with leading disability charity Leonard Cheshire to survey 250 disabled people and discovered that;
▪ 37% of their respondents had experienced hate crime.
▪ The majority of hate crime was experienced through social media.
In a survey commissioned by the charity Changing Faces in January 2020;
▪ Over a quarter (28%) of people with a visible difference have experienced a Hate Crime
▪Almost half of those who had experienced negative behaviours said they had lost confidence, over a third say they now feel anxious when they go out.
impact of hate crime |
Impact of Hate Crime
Hate Crime is identity based crime, attacking what makes someone an individual. An attack on something that is a feature of core identity can leave someone feeling vulnerable and can take longer to recover from.
Hate Crime can lead to behavioural changes such as
- An increase in substance misuse.
- Deterioration in personal relationships.
- A withdrawal from usual activities with tendencies towards detachment, avoidance and isolation.
- A change in usual routines.
- A need or desire to conceal identities.
- Moving home, changing location and removal from the situation.
- Uncontrollable crying that is concealed from others.
- Feelings of shame, fear or guilt, including fear for family and friends.
- Agitation, restlessness with feelings of frustration.
- Nightmares and disrupted sleep.
- Costs related to repairing or replacing property or removing graffiti.
- Loss of work or earnings.
- Paying for additional security.
reporting hate crime |
Barriers to Reporting Hate Crime
How to Report Hate Crime
- By calling 0300 30 31 982
- Visiting their website at https://www.reporthate.victimsupport.org.uk/
- Twitter @VictimSupportHC
- Facebook: VictimSupportHC
- Instagram: vswaleshatecrime
- If you wish to make a self-referral email: hate.crimewales(at)victimsupport.org.uk
Say no to Hate Crime |
🟍Source Victim Support Disability Hate Crime FactSheet.