Tag: deaths

  • Deaths by road crash increase by 17% in Africa – WHO

    Deaths by road crash increase by 17% in Africa – WHO

    The World Health Organization (WHO) has emphasized the necessity for Ghana and other African nations to adopt comprehensive policies and strategies aimed at reducing road crashes, injuries, and fatalities by 50% by 2030, in line with Target 3.6 of the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs).

    The international health body noted that these policies should foster sustainable transportation systems, enhance legislative frameworks for road safety, invest in data management systems, improve post-crash response, and conduct research addressing the continent’s specific issues.

    Additionally, WHO highlighted that the policies must address a range of factors contributing to road accidents, including inadequate enforcement of traffic laws, deteriorated road conditions, speeding, drunk driving, and insufficient safety education for road users.

    This call was part of the recommendations from its 2023 road safety status report for the African region, which was presented in Nairobi, Kenya, last Tuesday.

    Findings

    The report highlighted that Africa has become a major hotspot for road traffic fatalities, placing significant pressure on the continent’s public health systems and jeopardizing progress toward SDG 3.6, which aims to cut global road traffic deaths and injuries in half by 2030.

    For example, the report showed that although Africa represents 15 percent of the world’s population and has just three percent of the global vehicle fleet, it accounts for 20 percent of all road traffic deaths worldwide.

    Additionally, the report noted that road traffic death rates in Africa have risen sharply over the past decade, with nearly 250,000 fatalities occurring on the continent’s roads in 2021 alone.

    From 2010 to 2021, road crash deaths in Africa increased by 17 percent, whereas global death rates declined by five percent.

    The report also pointed out that men aged 15 to 64 years are the primary victims of road traffic accidents, with particularly vulnerable road users, such as motorcyclists, cyclists, and pedestrians, suffering the most.

    Lapses

    The report attributed the rise to multiple factors, including inadequate road safety laws and standards, indicating: “no country in the region currently has laws that meet the best practice standards for the five key road safety behavioural risk factors – speeding, drink driving, non-use of motorcycle helmets, seatbelts and child restraints.”
    It added that limited investments in alternative modes of transport, including cycling and walking, had fuelled road-related fatalities on the continent, with 13 per cent of countries having national strategies to promote walking or cycling.

    “These so-called multimodal transport systems have been determined to be more equitable and environmentally friendly, and safer for road users,” the report added.

    The report added that post-crash care services in the region were inadequate or unavailable in most countries – fewer than one-third have services that met recommended levels of access to pre-hospital care, emergency care, and treatment and rehabilitation services.

    The WHO Regional Director for Africa, Dr Matshidiso Moeti, said the findings of the report pointed to a serious public health concern for African countries, “with hundreds of thousands of lives being lost unnecessarily”.

    “As WHO, we’re committed to working hand in hand with countries to tackle this preventable threat and continue to fully support all efforts to make our roads safer for motorists and pedestrians alike,” he said.

    Action

    The WHO representative in Kenya, Abdourahmane Diallo, stated that for Africa to reduce the burden of road accidents, countries needed to revamp transport infrastructure, retrain motorists, and promote safety education targeting motorists, pedestrians and cyclists.

  • 60% of deaths registered in 2022 were males – Births and Deaths Registry

    60% of deaths registered in 2022 were males – Births and Deaths Registry

    The latest report from the Births and Deaths Registry reveals that more than 60% of registered deaths in 2022 were males, while 39.7% were females.

    This means that “6 out of every 10 registered deaths are likely to be males,” the report highlighted.

    The report also revealed that six regions (Central, Western North, Greater Accra, Ashanti, Volta, and Bono) had proportions of registered deaths below the male national average of 60.3%. The Northern Region had the lowest percentage of registered female deaths at 27.4%.

    In 2022, Ghana recorded a total of 50,992 registered deaths, with approximately 7 out of every 10 registered deaths occurring in the Greater Accra, Ashanti, or Eastern regions.

    A notable finding is that 4 out of every 10 registered deaths occurred outside healthcare facilities, indicating challenges associated with inadequate healthcare facilities.

    Furthermore, the data highlights that “about 9 out of every 10 registered deaths resulted in burials in public cemeteries, indicating the prevalence of organised and official burial practices in Ghana.”

    The statistical data for 2022 deaths registration reveals disparities in regional responses to death registration activities.

    Several regions recorded disproportionately higher registered deaths. The Greater Accra Region exceeded the expected coverage by 8.3%. Additionally, the Eastern Region (53.6%), Ashanti Region (46.7%), and Bono Region (43.8%) all exceeded the national average of 37.8%.

  • Lack of accountability for deaths during 2020 election shameful – AU Rep

    Lack of accountability for deaths during 2020 election shameful – AU Rep

    African Union (AU) High Representative for the Silencing of Guns, Dr. Mohammed Ibn Chambas, has criticized the absence of accountability for certain violence-related fatalities observed during the 2020 general elections, deeming it disgraceful.

    Addressing attendees at the commemoration of the 25th anniversary of the West Africa Network for Peacebuilding on Wednesday, March 13, 2024, in Accra, Dr. Chambas underscored the imperative for governments and stakeholders to guarantee elections free from incidents across the sub-region.

    He urged Ghana’s election management body to strive towards ensuring that the forthcoming general election in December proceeds without any incidents.

    “We are hoping that there will be maximum peace than in the last election; 8 persons were lost. It’s a shame that accountability has not been brought to bear on that incident where those persons were lost. That is something we should avoid at all costs,” he stated.

    Dr. Chukuemeka Eze, the Executive Director of WANEP, emphasized that the anniversary commemoration acts as a forum to honor and acknowledge the organization’s efforts in advancing peace in West Africa. He also affirmed the organization’s commitment to continuing its work towards peace-building initiatives.

    “We are also using the opportunity through our Annual Participatory Review and Analysis Process to review our operations. In doing that, to also reflect on key issues in West Africa,” he stated.

    Key stakeholders present at the event included Senior Adviser at the United Nations Department of Political and Peace Building Affairs, Emmanuel Bombande, and officials of the Boundary Commission, among others.

  • China Covid: Celebrity deaths spark fears over death toll

    China Covid: Celebrity deaths spark fears over death toll

    The growing number of Chinese public figures whose deaths are being made public is prompting people to question the official Covid death toll.

    The death of Chu Lanlan, a 40-year-old opera singer, last month came as a shock to many, given how young she was.

    Her family said they were saddened by her “abrupt departure”, but did not give details of the cause of her death.

    China scrapped its strict zero-Covid policy in December and has seen a rapid surge of infections and deaths.

    There are reports of hospitals and crematoria becoming overwhelmed.

    But the country has stopped publishing daily cases data, and has announced only 22 Covid deaths since December, using its own strict criteria.

    Now only those who die from respiratory illnesses such as pneumonia are counted.

    On Wednesday the World Health Organization (WHO) warned that China was under-representing the true impact of Covid in the country – in particular deaths.

    But the deaths of Chu Lanlan and others is sparking speculation about greater losses than those reported on official accounts.

    According to the specialist news website Operawire, Chu Lanlan was a soprano who specialised in Peking Opera – a theatrical art in which performers use speech, song, dance and combat movements to tell stories – and was also involved in charitable causes.

    On New Year’s Day news of the death of actor Gong Jintang devastated many Chinese internet users.

    Gong Jintang
    Image caption,Gong Jintang was known for his performance in the country’s longest-running TV series, In-Laws, Out-laws.

    Gong, 83, was known to many households for his performance in the country’s longest-running TV series, In-Laws, Out-laws. His portrait of Father Kang had captivated fans for more than two decades since the show first aired in 2000.

    The cause of his death is unclear, but many social media users linked it to the recent deaths of other older people.

    “Please god, please treat the elderly better,” his co-star Hu Yanfen wrote on Chinese social media platform Weibo.

    “R.I.P Father Kang. This wave have really claimed many elders’ lives, let’s make sure we protect the elderly in our families,” one user wrote on Weibo.

    Acclaimed scriptwriter Ni Zhen was also among recent deaths. The 84-year-old was famous for his work on the 1991 film Raise the Red Lantern, which is widely considered to be one of the best Chinese films by critics.

    Meanwhile Hu Fuming, a former journalist and retired professor of Nanjing University, died on 2 January at the age of 87.

    He was the main author of a famous commentary published in 1978 that marked the start of the China’s “Boluan Fanzheng” period – a time of eliminating chaos and returning to normal after the upheaval of the Cultural Revolution under the country’s first Communist leader Mao Zedong.

    Hu Fuming
    Image caption,Hu Fuming was a well known scholar and author

    According to a tally by Chinese media, 16 scientists from the country’s top science and engineering academies died between 21 and 26 December.

    None of these deaths were linked to Covid in their obituaries, but that hasn’t prevented speculation online.

    “Did he also die of ‘bad flu’?” one of the top-rated comments under news of Mr Ni’s death said.

    “Even if you trawl through the whole internet you can’t find any reference to his cause of death,” said another internet user.

    But there was also criticism of demonstrators who took to the streets in November in rare political protests calling for the end of leader Xi Jinping’s zero-Covid policy.

    “Are those people happy now, seeing old people… now paving the way for their freedom?” asked one social media user.

    Mr Xi appeared to refer obliquely to the protests in his New Year’s address, saying it was natural in such a big country for people to have different opinions.

    But he urged people to come together and show unity as China entered a “new phase” in its approach to Covid.

    The Chinese authorities are aware of the widespread scepticism although they continue to play down the severity of this wave of Covid sweeping the country.

    In an interview with state TV, the director of Beijing’s Institute of Respiratory Diseases admitted the number of deaths of elderly people so far this winter was “definitely more” than in past years, while also stressing that critical cases remained a minority of the overall number of Covid cases.

    This week the People’s Daily, the Communist Party’s official newspaper, urged citizens to work towards a “final victory” over Covid and dismissed criticism of the previous zero-Covid policy.

    Source: BBC

  • Iran hijab protests: TikToker Hadis Najafi, 23, shot dead

    Hadis Najafi took to the streets of Karaj last week in protest at Iran’s hijab mandate and was shot dead. She was not openly outspoken about women’s liberation but enjoyed sharing her life with her followers on social media.

    She was not an activist or openly outspoken online about women’s liberation, but she was still gunned down in her home city campaigning for her right to live and dress how she wanted.

    Hadis Najafi, 23, took to the streets of Karaj last week to speak out against Iran’s strict hijab mandateand was shot dead.

    Her death has fuelled further anger in a country already reckoning with the strict rule of the so-called morality police.

    Part of Iran’s Generation Z, Hadis was a young woman who grew up in the age of the internet and social media.

    Like Zoomers everywhere, these digital natives are connected to the rest of the world in a way their parents could never have imagined.

    Hopes for a better future

    An avid user of TikTok and Instagram, Hadis enjoyed sharing her life with her followers on social media.

    She was not openly outspoken about women’s liberation, but she posted videos on her TikTok account dancing to the latest viral trend, including to pop music and Iranian singers.

    Her social media would not have looked out of place anywhere in the world. Smiling and pouting at the camera, she danced around her room in bright clothing.

    She worked as a cashier at a restaurant and loved sharing fashion on her Instagram, styling her hair both with and without her hijab – but only in the safety of her home or other private places.

    Hijabs are mandatory in public for all women in Iran, regardless of religion or nationality.

    A close friend described her as “always happy and energetic”.

    But then violence erupted after another young woman, Mahsa Amini, 22, died in police custody on 16 September. She had been detained, allegedly, for wearing her hijab too loosely.

    Outcry over her death has boiled over into some of the biggest protests in the country for years and the anger of a generation of women who had grown used to freedom online poured out on to the streets.

    Women removed their head coverings and burnt them as others recorded the scenes on mobile phones, uploading them to social media where they have been shared worldwide.

    To make it difficult for protesters, the authorities have restricted internet access in several provinces, according to internet blockage observatory NetBlocks.

    Sky News spoke to one of Hadis’s close friends on Instagram and asked if she had been scared when she set off on 21 September.

    “Several nurses… told her family to run, because Hadis had been at the protests so they might also be targeted if the police came,” her friend said.

    “The husband of one of Hadis’s sisters works for the Basij [an Iranian paramilitary volunteer militia], so they let him go into the mortuary to do the formal identification. Only him.

    “They didn’t let her family see her.”

    After two days, the family agreed with authorities not to have a public funeral: “What I tell you now comes from her family,” Hadis’s friend said.

     

    View this post on Instagram

     

    A post shared by HADIS NAJAFI (@hadisnajafi78)

    “On Friday morning they let her crying mother and sisters see her face, to make sure they were burying the right person. There wasn’t a real funeral because of the agreement.

    “After she was buried, her sisters Afsoon and Shirin decided to publish her photos and tell people she was shot. The authorities didn’t want people to say she was shot, they were told to say she’d died in a car crash, or a brain injury, that she’d died a natural death.”

    Masked forces shoot directly at protesters

    Ebrahim Raisi, the Iranian president, has vowed to investigate Ms Amini’s death but said that the authorities would not tolerate any threats to public security.

    He said protesters should be “dealt with decisively” and the subsequent crackdown by authorities has been swift, brutal, and violent.

    On 21 September, the footage was first shared online of masked men shooting directly and from close range at protesters on Eram Boulevard, where her friend said Hadis was last seen alive.

    The location of this clip was verified by Sky News by cross-referencing the car dealership in the background with images of the street shared on Google Maps.

    iran osint

    Although Hadis is not in this clip it indicates it is not the only time Iranian police have been accused of using excessive force on protesters.

    And Hadis is not the only woman to have been killed. The names of at least four other women alleged to have died in the protests have gone viral in the past week.

     

  • Mexico: The most dangerous country in the world for environmental advocates

    According to a report released on Wednesday by the advocacy group Global Witness, Latin America saw the highest number of environmentalist deaths worldwide in 2017.

    Up to 200 environmentalists were killed worldwide in 2021, with 75 percent of the deaths taking place in Latin America. The entire number was 227 in 2020.

    Mexico had the most deaths at 54 and jumped from its number of 30 reported in 2020. Colombia and Brazil came next, with 33 and 26 cases respectively.

    Mexico, Brazil, Nicaragua, and Peru together accounted for over half the total deaths. Indigenous people were the recipients of more than 40% of the attacks, said the report.

    In Mexico, officials believe local authorities are implicated in about 40% of the killings based on preliminary investigations.

    Land conflicts biggest cause

    “These lethal attacks continue to take place in the context of a wider range of threats against defenders who are being targeted by the government, business and other non-state actors with violence, intimidation, smear campaigns, and criminalization,” the organization said in its report.

    “This figure is likely to be higher as the reasons behind attacks on land and environmental defenders are often not properly investigated nor reported,” it added.

    Global Witness said land conflicts such as resource exploitation, logging, mining, and large-scale agriculture were behind many attacks.

    Killings related to mining and extraction activities were highest with 27 cases. Mexico, the Philippines, and Venezuela had 14, 6, and 4 cases respectively.

  • Who is responsible for the deaths of children at EU borders?

    Thousands of children die or are harmed when fleeing for safety to and within Europe due to violent border control policies

    On August 10, the world found out about the tragic death of five-year-old Maria on the Greek-Turkish border. The little Syrian girl was part of a group of 39 refugees, who had crossed from Turkey into Greece to seek asylum, but who were instead pushed back by the Greek and Turkish authorities onto an uninhabitable islet in the middle of the Evros river, which runs along the border.

    Maria died after being stung by a scorpion, two days after the group was stranded there.

    Although activists contacted the Greek police, Frontex and the UNHCR in Greece to rescue the group, their calls were presented as “fake news” and ignored. Another girl, a nine-year-old, was also stung by a scorpion and was in critical condition.

    A few weeks later, a four-year-old girl died on a refugee boat that had tried to reach Italy but had broken down and drifted towards Malta. Despite alerts about a vessel in distress, European authorities did not respond for six days.

    These are not just isolated cases of child refugees dying at a European border, while fleeing war, authoritarianism, climate change-related natural disasters, poverty or a combination of these factors. In 2015, the world was shocked by photos of three-year-old Syrian boy Alan Kurdi, who drowned in the Mediterranean Sea after a boat carrying him and dozens of other refugees sank. In 2017, international media reported on the story of six-year-old Afghan girl Madina Husein, who was hit by a train after she and her family were pushed back by Croatian authorities into Serbia.

    Alongside these few publicly known cases, the Missing Migrants Project, launched by the International Organization for Migration, reports that more than 1,000 children died or went missing during their journeys to Europe between 2014 and 2022. These children died or got lost at European borders – stretching from the English Channel to the Balkans, and the Mediterranean – and borders of Europe’s key partners in migration controls, Turkey and Libya. Children who do survive their journeys to European Union countries often get injured or traumatised while crossing borders.

    While researching border-related violence, I have met many families who saw their children being harmed or dying. Their stories are similar to Maria’s. They all took place at borders where illegal pushbacks by local authorities and Frontex are a common practice, which denies people the right to seek asylum.

    Nearly 2,000 kilometres (1,243 miles) east of where Maria died lies the border between Iran and Turkey, which refugees from Afghanistan, Pakistan, Bangladesh, and Iran try to cross on their way to Europe. Even asylum seekers from Turkey’s neighbours, Iraq and Syria, opt for this dangerous route, as the Syrian-Turkish and Iraqi-Turkish borders have become more difficult to pass through.

    To prevent movement towards its borders, the EU has provided 110 million euros ($110m) to Turkey to construct a concrete wall and install additional surveillance equipment at the Iran-Turkey border. In parallel, pushbacks by Turkish border authorities have become the main form of migration deterrence.

    During my research at this border in 2021, I met several people who said they were pushed back by Turkish security forces into Iranian territory. Four men from Afghanistan told me that after a pushback, they got lost in the mountainous area near the border; while walking through the rough terrain, they came across members of an Afghan family, including a baby who was about a year old, lying dead in the snow: “They had to die of freezing,” one of the men told me.

    In other cases, refugees, including children, were injured or died while being transported by smugglers across Turkish territory. “I was here when 70 people drowned in Van Lake, including a six-month-old baby from Afghanistan,” an Afghan refugee I met in the Turkish city of Van, told me. “We were all crying and buried the little body in the local cemetery.” I also heard stories of children dying when police opened fire on the vehicles they were travelling in or when they crashed.

    About 1,300 kilometres (808 miles) to the northeast of the Evros River, where Maria died, lies the Croatian-Bosnian border. I volunteered there with the Border Violence Monitoring Network in 2018 and 2019. Among the hundreds of people I met reporting pushbacks was an Iranian family, which included a three-year-old girl. Her father rolled up her T-shirt to show her bruised back and said: “[During the push-back from Croatia to Bosnia, Croatian] police kept shouting at us to go fast across the river. I was holding in my arms my daughter and they kept beating me while I was holding her. I slipped and fell, and my baby got her back injured.”

    The deaths and injuries of refugee children are commonly labeled by state officials as accidents that happen as a result of the harsh terrain refugees cross and attacks by wild animals, or because of their dealings with smugglers. State authorities also like to blame and prosecute parents for their children’s deaths – a practice that has been backed even by international aid agency officials.

    “The same mothers [grieving for the loss of their children] had no problem encouraging or funding their children on dangerous journeys to Europe. Like in Senegal, symbolically prosecuting parents for putting at risk their children could trigger serious attitudinal change on death journeys,” Vincent Cochetel, a special UNHCR envoy, recently argued in a tweet.

    By adopting this narrative, EU governments and officials seek to absolve themselves of responsibility for refugee children’s deaths. But the blame very much lies with them.

    Children are placed in these dangerous situations because of the EU’s migration policies and border controls which aim to reduce refugee arrivals to the Union. Families with small children would not have to embark on risky journeys, alone or with smugglers if they were not denied legal and safe border passage and immediate access to asylum procedures. Children would not be stranded on islands and in the mountains or fall into the rivers or seas if EU state authorities and their non-EU partners were not pushing them back or refusing rescue missions.

    In other words, children die at borders because of violent policies, including surveillance and pushbacks, deliberately deployed to prevent them from exercising their right to asylum.

    This means that children’s deaths are not accidents but the result of EU “strategies of non-arrival” which aim to stop refugees from exercising their rights granted by international law. At the same time, closed border passage underpins racial violence as border walls and pushbacks target mainly non-white refugee groups fleeing former European colonies.

    The humanitarian corridors the EU opened earlier this year for Ukrainian refugees – who are considered white and European and therefore, “desirable” – demonstrate that it is possible for children (and adult) refugees to cross borders in safe and legal ways in order to apply for asylum in the EU.

    Children are without doubt the most vulnerable refugee population. Any refugee child, no matter their race, faith or social background, should be allowed to cross borders safely to access protection. European officials should abandon violent closed-border policies and develop safe and legal routes in collaboration with their key partners.

    Instead of prosecuting parents who have lost their children on dangerous migration journeys, governments ought to hold accountable members of their security forces who commit illegal pushbacks and use violence against refugees. Equally, Europe should move away from the racist logic of border control shaped by its colonial past. Unless these changes are made, we will continue reading media reports about the tragic deaths of children at borders.

     

    DISCLAIMER: Independentghana.com will not be liable for any inaccuracies contained in this article. The views expressed in the article are solely those of the author’s and do not reflect those of The Independent Ghana

    Source: Aljazeera.com

  • South Korean stalking laws sparks fury after a subway murder

    In the capital of South Korea, Seoul, a plaque bearing the phrase “Women Friendly Seoul” can be found outside the women’s lavatory at a train stop.

    The phrases, which were intended to reassure women of their safety, have taken on a fatal irony.

    Last week, inside the restroom, a young woman who worked at the station was brutally murdered. The man suspected of killing her had been stalking her for years.

    The wall underneath the plaque has since become a shrine of messages left as notes, with women and men of all ages coming to express their fury, fear, and sorrow.

    “I want to be alive at the end of my workday,” reads one. “Is it too much to ask, to be safe to reject people I don’t like?” reads another.

    The mother of a teenage girl cries as she scans the messages. “Where have we gone so wrong?” she asks, now questioning whether to allow her daughter to travel to school alone.

    Shocking murder

    The details of this murder have shocked the country. The 28-year-old had been working her usual evening shift at the subway station, unaware she was being watched.

    Her alleged attacker, 31-year-old Jeon Joo-hwan, waited for over an hour outside the toilets, wearing gloves and a disposable shower cap, before following her inside and stabbing her to death.

    It was the day before he was due to be sentenced for stalking her.

    People have left Post-it note messages at the murder scene expressing their anger and fear
    Image caption, People have left Post-it note messages at the murder scene expressing their anger and fear

    The harassment started in 2019, a year after the pair began working together. Jeon called his colleague more than 300 times begging her to date him, threatening to harm her if she refused.

    When she reported him last October, he was fired from his job and arrested. But despite a police investigation and a request to the courts for him to be detained, he was never imprisoned or given a restraining order.

    The victim was placed under police protection for a month until they concluded there was nothing significant to report. Jeon then continued to threaten and stalk.

    Since their daughter’s death, her parents and two younger sisters have barely left the funeral home, where her body still lies, surrounded by flowers from remorseful politicians.

    The family is devastated, not only by their loss but because she never told them what she was going through. So traumatized is her mother, she struggles to speak. She has decided to protect her daughter’s identity.

    The victim's uncle looks at flowers sent to the funeral home where his niece's body lies
    Image caption, The victim’s uncle looks at flowers sent to the funeral home where his niece’s body lies

    “We never worried about her,” her uncle tells me. “She was so smart and independent”. With pride he recalls how she was top of her class, winning herself a scholarship to a university in Seoul.

    As the oldest of three girls, she looked out for her sisters. These past years she had shown no sign of suffering, he says, suggesting this was because she had not wanted to burden them.

    The only person she confided in was her lawyer, who she last messaged on the morning of her murder, the day before her stalker’s sentencing. “We are almost there”, she wrote.

    Her family is now watching, along with the rest of the country, as the horrifying details of her case unfold. They have exposed weaknesses in South Korea’s stalking laws and led to accusations the country does not treat violence against women seriously enough.

    Anti-stalking laws

    Until last year, stalking was classed as a misdemeanor, punishable only by a small fine. An anti-stalking law was finally passed in October, but many argued it was insufficient and would not protect victims, primarily because of its stipulation that a perpetrator can only be prosecuted with the consent of the victim.

    This loophole, they say, makes it possible for stalkers to bully their victims into withdrawing cases – in the same way Jeon attempted to threaten his victim. Jeon reportedly told police he murdered her because he resented her for taking legal action.

    A note posted outside the subway station reads ‘how many more women need to die for this country to change?’
    Image caption, A note posted outside the subway station reads: “How many more women need to die for this country to change?”

    Data obtained by the BBC from South Korea’s National Police Agency shows that since the stalking law came into force last year, 7,152 stalking arrests have been made, but only 5% of the suspects were detained. In cases where police applied to the courts to get the suspect detained, one in three requests were denied.

    South Korea’s President Yoon Suk-yeol has acknowledged the country’s stalking laws are insufficient and has ordered the Justice Ministry to strengthen them.

    Prof Lee Soo-jung, a criminal psychologist who advises the government, says she could not sleep after she heard about the murder. “We were not able to protect her, so yes, we failed her,” she admits.

    The professor is recommending the ministry remove the clause that requires victims to agree to a prosecution. Meanwhile, the Supreme Court has proposed that stalking suspects who are not detained should be given restraining orders.

    But despite these promises, anger is growing. This week, hundreds of people gathered in Seoul dressed in black, to protest and mourn the victim.

    She was failed, the protestors shouted, by her employer, the police, and the courts, making her death symptomatic of a much bigger problem. They fear it could happen to any of them, that no space is safe.

    Safe spaces

    It has evoked memories of a similar murder six years ago, when a woman in her 20s was stabbed to death in a public restroom near Gangnam station, by a man who later said he killed her as revenge for all the women who looked down on him.

    To the protesters, this murder is proof that nothing has changed. “We’ve been fooled before, that change is coming”, the organisers bellowed over the loudspeakers. “Let’s see what happens this time.”

    “We don’t need new laws,” said Choi Jin-hyup, director of the group Women Link. “What we need is to change authorities’ attitudes towards victims.” She blames the government, which has tied itself in knots over women’s rights.

    During the recent election campaign, the president pledged to close the Gender Equality Ministry, declaring it obsolete because structural sexism no longer existed. When the gender minister visited the scene of the murder, she told reporters she did not believe this was a case of gender-based violence. There are now calls for her to resign.

    23-year-old museum curator Lee Chai-hui doesn't feel safe as a young woman in Korea
    Image caption, Museum curator Lee Chai-hui, 23, does not feel safe as a young woman in South Korea

    At the subway station, 23-year-old Lee Chae-hui lays a white flower and bows her head.

    “I’m very angry,” she says. “We keep reporting these crimes as just another mindless murder, but women are continuously stalked and attacked, and our politicians are ignoring it. People talk about how South Korea is a safe place, but as a woman in my 20s I can’t relate to this at all, I feel I live in a very dangerous society.”

    Chae-hui’s friends have a phrase they use to congratulate each other: “We survived another day.”

    The sentiment is echoed in dozens of Post-it messages asking: “How many more women need to die for this country to change?”