logo
Exposure - Breaking The Silence: Kate's Story

Exposure - Breaking The Silence: Kate's Story

ITV News7 days ago
It is estimated that 2.3 million people aged 16 years and over experienced domestic abuse in the year ending March 2024. There were 1.6 million women and 712,000 men. This means 1 in 6 men, and 1 in 4 women will experience domestic abuse in their lifetime and at least one woman a week is killed by their current or ex-partner. No one should face domestic abuse alone. Below are some charities which provide vital support. Please do reach out if you are worried about yourself or someone else, if it is safe to do so.
Important Contact Details:
If you are in immediate danger, call 999 and ask for the police. If you can't speak and are calling on a mobile press 55 to have your call transferred to the police.
Domestic Violence Helplines:
The Domestic and Sexual Abuse Helpline for Northern Ireland: help@dsahelpline.org 0808 8021414
Scotland Domestic Abuse and Forced Marriage Helpline: 0800 027 1234
Wales: Live Fear Free Helpline: 0808 8010 800
England: Refuge's National Domestic Abuse Helpline: 0808 2000 247
UK wide Men's Advice Line is a confidential helpline specifically for male victims: 0808 8010 327
Rape Crisis Rape Crisis England & Wales Call free on 0808 500 2222
Surviving Economic Abuse: 0808 196 8845 (run by Money Advice Plus)
The Mix, free information and support for under 25s in the UK: 0808 808 4994
National LGBT+ Domestic Abuse Helpline: 0800 999 5428 (run by Galop)
Samaritans: 116 123
For issues concerning child abuse, you can contact the NSPCC Helpline by calling 0808 8005000
Women's Aid:
Women's Aid is a grassroots federation working together to provide life-saving services and build a future where domestic violence is not tolerated. They can offer direct support through their email service and Survivor's Forum.Contact helpline@womensaid.org.uk to speak to a Women's Aid professional or https://www.womensaid.org.uk/
Refuge:
Refuge, the largest UK domestic abuse organisation for women, offers a wide range of services to support victims of domestic abuse. Visit www.nationaldahelpline.org.uk to fill in a webform and request a safe time to be contacted or to access live chat (live chat available 10am-10pm, Monday to Friday). For support with technology-facilitated abuse visit refugetechsafety.org.https://refuge.org.uk/
Rights of Women:
Rights of Women (ROW) provides frontline legal advice to women experiencing all forms of violence against women and girls in England and Wales. Call their advice lines listed below or fill in a webform to receive support.Family law advice line: 020 7251 6577Criminal law advice line: 020 7251 8887FLOWS: A free online criminal law advice service for women in England and Wales called FLOWS Answers. You can write to them using the online tool and a lawyer from the Rights of Women team will email you with a response to your question within 2 weeks: https://cms.rightsofwomen.org.uk/flows-answers/triage
Surviving Economic Abuse
Surviving Economic Abuse (SEA) is the only UK charity dedicated to raising awareness of economic abuse and transforming responses to it. SEA runs a Financial Support line in partnership with Money Advice Plus, which provides dedicated support to victim-survivors with their money worries, providing the opportunity to regain financial control and economic stability.
They can be contacted on 0808 196 8845 between 9am–5pm Monday to Friday. Calls are freeof charge.
https://survivingeconomicabuse.org/
Practitioner Health
NHS staff in England and Scotland are able to access confidential mental health care through NHS Practitioner Health. The service exists to support health and care staff who face barriers or experience difficulties accessing care through mainstream routes and understand how issues such as domestic abuse can cause stigma. Practitioner Health can offer access to expert mental health clinicians and to both one to one and group therapy.The service is available at www.practitionerhealth.nhs.uk or by calling 0300 0303 300
Centre for Women's Justice
Centre for Women's Justice is a small charity which aims to hold the state to account for violence against women and girls. Their website provides signposting to specialist legal advice on varies different types of legal issues.
For those causing harm who want to stop:
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

One in eight women victims of domestic abuse, stalking or sexual assault, new figures show
One in eight women victims of domestic abuse, stalking or sexual assault, new figures show

ITV News

time4 days ago

  • ITV News

One in eight women victims of domestic abuse, stalking or sexual assault, new figures show

One in eight women were victims of domestic crime, sexual abuse or stalking in the last year, new data has revealed. According to the Office for National Statistics (ONS), around 3.2 million women aged over 16 were victims of at least one of these crimes between March 2024 and 2025. It is the first time the ONS has grouped domestic abuse, sexual assault and stalking figures together, using data collected as part of the Crime Survey for England and Wales. The ONS hope this will mean it can more accurately estimate of the prevalence of domestic abuse, sexual assault and stalking against women and girls. The government will also use the figures to track its efforts on tackling violence against women and girls (VAWG). The figures, released Thursday, show estimated 5.1 million people aged 16 and over in England and Wales are likely to have experienced one of these crime types. Of those, 3.2 million are women and nearly 2.0 million are men. This equates to about one in 12 men being victims of at least one of the crime types over the same period. Reacting to the figures, Home Secretary Yvette Cooper said: "We have already started to put domestic abuse specialists in 999 control rooms, invested in major new perpetrator programmes, and why we are publishing a transformative cross-government VAWG strategy in September, because everybody has a right to feel safe on our streets.' Women's Aid welcomed the ONS grouping the data together, saying it was a step towards a better overview of these crimes. Sarah Davidge, head of research and evaluation at Women's Aid, said the move "reflects the Government's commitment to ending VAWG", but added the data does not show the number of times each person was added: "We know that women encounter higher rates of repeat victimisation, are more likely to be subject to coercive and controlling behaviour and be seriously harmed or killed than male victims."Therefore, prevalence measures can underestimate the gender asymmetry of these crimes." Elsewhere, ONS data published on Thursday shows people aged 16 and over experienced 9.4 million incidents of crime in the year to March 2025, up from 8.8 million in the previous 12 months. The rise is mainly due to a 31% rise in fraud, which accounts for 4.2 million incidents and is the highest estimate since fraud was first measured in the survey in 2016/17. The figures also show that offences of shoplifting and theft from the person remain at record highs, while homicides are at their lowest level for more than a decade.

BREAKING NEWS Wannabe influencer who stabbed wife to death in 'ferocious' knife attack while pushing their baby son's pram is jailed for 28 years
BREAKING NEWS Wannabe influencer who stabbed wife to death in 'ferocious' knife attack while pushing their baby son's pram is jailed for 28 years

Daily Mail​

time6 days ago

  • Daily Mail​

BREAKING NEWS Wannabe influencer who stabbed wife to death in 'ferocious' knife attack while pushing their baby son's pram is jailed for 28 years

A wannabe influencer who slit his wife's throat as she pushed their son's pram has been jailed for 28 years. Habibur Masum, 27, was found guilty of the murder of Kulsuma Akter in a 'ferocious' knife attack in broad daylight before leaving her bleeding to death and calmly walking away on April 6 last year. She was stabbed 26 times and stamped on by 'controlling' Masum in a 'brutal and merciless' attack in front of their seven-month-old son. Jurors at his trial heard Masum followed Ms Akter to a refuge in Bradford where she had been staying to escape him after he held a knife to her throat at their home in Greater Manchester. After finding her through her phone location, Masum loitered in streets around the hostel and sent her messages threatening to kill her family members if she did not return to him, before trying to lure her out by sending her fake messages from a local GP practice pretending their son had an appointment. The court heard Ms Akter eventually felt safe enough to leave the refuge after Masum updated his Facebook page falsely claiming to be in Spain. As she was walking in the city centre with a friend, pushing her baby in a pram, Masum confronted her, the trial heard. CCTV footage of the attack captured Ms Akter's screams as Masum stabbed her at least 25 times. Jurors heard he then calmly walked through Bradford city centre and was seen on CCTV grinning as he got on a bus, believing at that point he was getting away. Habibur Masum, 27, was found guilty of murdering Kulsuma Akter in a 'ferocious' knife attack in broad daylight The trial heard the relationship between Masum and Ms Akter was 'an abusive relationship characterised by his jealousy, possessiveness and controlling behaviour'. The couple met and married in Bangladesh, and came to the UK in 2022 after he obtained a student visa and enrolled on a Masters course to study marketing. They moved into a house in Oldham together in September 2022. On November 23 2023, he became jealous over a 'completely innocuous' message Ms Akter received from a male colleague and held a knife to her throat. He was arrested and Ms Akter decided to leave him, being moved to the Bradford refuge by Oldham social services in January 2024. But Masum continued to pursue her and tracked Ms Akter to the refuge through her phone location, and she had been due to move but went out walking with a friend on the day she died after Masum's brother told her he was in Spain. Masum also put photos on Facebook claiming he was in Spain in a bid to trick his estranged wife from leaving the refuge. He then travelled almost 200 miles south to Aylesbury, Buckinghamshire, to carry out the 'merciless' attack in broad daylight. Masum was arrested in the early hours of April 9 in a car park near Stoke Mandeville Hospital, where he had gone to be treated for 'lockjaw'.

Exposure - Breaking The Silence: Kate's Story
Exposure - Breaking The Silence: Kate's Story

ITV News

time7 days ago

  • ITV News

Exposure - Breaking The Silence: Kate's Story

It is estimated that 2.3 million people aged 16 years and over experienced domestic abuse in the year ending March 2024. There were 1.6 million women and 712,000 men. This means 1 in 6 men, and 1 in 4 women will experience domestic abuse in their lifetime and at least one woman a week is killed by their current or ex-partner. No one should face domestic abuse alone. Below are some charities which provide vital support. Please do reach out if you are worried about yourself or someone else, if it is safe to do so. Important Contact Details: If you are in immediate danger, call 999 and ask for the police. If you can't speak and are calling on a mobile press 55 to have your call transferred to the police. Domestic Violence Helplines: The Domestic and Sexual Abuse Helpline for Northern Ireland: help@ 0808 8021414 Scotland Domestic Abuse and Forced Marriage Helpline: 0800 027 1234 Wales: Live Fear Free Helpline: 0808 8010 800 England: Refuge's National Domestic Abuse Helpline: 0808 2000 247 UK wide Men's Advice Line is a confidential helpline specifically for male victims: 0808 8010 327 Rape Crisis Rape Crisis England & Wales Call free on 0808 500 2222 Surviving Economic Abuse: 0808 196 8845 (run by Money Advice Plus) The Mix, free information and support for under 25s in the UK: 0808 808 4994 National LGBT+ Domestic Abuse Helpline: 0800 999 5428 (run by Galop) Samaritans: 116 123 For issues concerning child abuse, you can contact the NSPCC Helpline by calling 0808 8005000 Women's Aid: Women's Aid is a grassroots federation working together to provide life-saving services and build a future where domestic violence is not tolerated. They can offer direct support through their email service and Survivor's helpline@ to speak to a Women's Aid professional or Refuge: Refuge, the largest UK domestic abuse organisation for women, offers a wide range of services to support victims of domestic abuse. Visit to fill in a webform and request a safe time to be contacted or to access live chat (live chat available 10am-10pm, Monday to Friday). For support with technology-facilitated abuse visit Rights of Women: Rights of Women (ROW) provides frontline legal advice to women experiencing all forms of violence against women and girls in England and Wales. Call their advice lines listed below or fill in a webform to receive law advice line: 020 7251 6577Criminal law advice line: 020 7251 8887FLOWS: A free online criminal law advice service for women in England and Wales called FLOWS Answers. You can write to them using the online tool and a lawyer from the Rights of Women team will email you with a response to your question within 2 weeks: Surviving Economic Abuse Surviving Economic Abuse (SEA) is the only UK charity dedicated to raising awareness of economic abuse and transforming responses to it. SEA runs a Financial Support line in partnership with Money Advice Plus, which provides dedicated support to victim-survivors with their money worries, providing the opportunity to regain financial control and economic stability. They can be contacted on 0808 196 8845 between 9am–5pm Monday to Friday. Calls are freeof charge. Practitioner Health NHS staff in England and Scotland are able to access confidential mental health care through NHS Practitioner Health. The service exists to support health and care staff who face barriers or experience difficulties accessing care through mainstream routes and understand how issues such as domestic abuse can cause stigma. Practitioner Health can offer access to expert mental health clinicians and to both one to one and group service is available at or by calling 0300 0303 300 Centre for Women's Justice Centre for Women's Justice is a small charity which aims to hold the state to account for violence against women and girls. Their website provides signposting to specialist legal advice on varies different types of legal issues. For those causing harm who want to stop:

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store