When you consider the specifics of what sparked the vigil, how was this the outcome? pic.twitter.com/3pfvkXB1JZ
— Cllr Michelle Guy (@MichelleGuy4) March 13, 2021
One of your colleagues allegedly murdered a woman @metpoliceuk. That’s why women are gathering to mourn. And now you’re brutalising them.
— Ash Sarkar (@AyoCaesar) March 13, 2021
I was there at 6. I’m a teacher in a small room with 29 kids and 2 other adults, no masks, no social distancing, for over 6 hours a day. I stood outside on the common , socially distanced and wearing a mask for 15 minutes and cried. Rip Sarah 💔 pic.twitter.com/6uEgkcK7eH
— Emma C 💙 (@emsibabes) March 13, 2021
Walking up to the Clapham Common bandstand to leave flowers for Sarah Everard and her loved ones. The daffodils have come out. They are lining Poynders Road as though representing every woman who would like to bear witness and stand for her, and can’t today. pic.twitter.com/pleGdYMBpl
— Kat Brown (@katbrown) March 13, 2021
This is what the Sarah Everard vigil looked like before tens of Met Police moved in, disrupted the mourners and proceeded to arrest women off the bandstand. Shameful pic.twitter.com/RcsIF76Nwj
— Zing Tsjeng (@misszing) March 13, 2021
People are threading their bouquets through the Clapham Common bandstand and already it is making the most beautiful monument to Sarah Everard and to all who knew and loved her. pic.twitter.com/FDYzxM8yQ9
— Kat Brown (@katbrown) March 13, 2021
Vigil for Sarah Everard at London Fields, North London. It took a lot to not break down right there. My thoughts reflected by a woman nearby saying “it could have been any of us.”
— Sian (sh-arn) Bradley (@sianabradley) March 13, 2021
Solidarity to all women. We will keep fighting for our right to exist safely. #ReclaimTheseStreets pic.twitter.com/bjylKj5nDc
Amazing turn out for Sarah Everard “Flowers for Sarah” in Cheltenham Pittville Park, a truly moving display and a fantastic idea from Louise which I was honoured to be a part of.
— Zasha Whiteway-Wilkinson (@zashawwilkinson) March 13, 2021
Do go and check it out if you can and lay a flower if you’d wish. #ReclaimTheStreets pic.twitter.com/yayISC6Wdj
Candles, flowers and messages left in tribute to #SarahEverard in Portstewart pic.twitter.com/JmT2qcnfyp
— Eimear McGovern (@3imear) March 13, 2021
Met Police faces intense criticism for handling of London vigil in memory of Sarah Everardhttps://t.co/eCUDzerJ3J
— RTÉ News (@rtenews) March 13, 2021
Sarah Everard: How a woman's death sparked a nation's soul-searching https://t.co/UEIEcYig0z
— BBC News (UK) (@BBCNews) March 13, 2021
Sarah Everard: pressure for new laws to curb violence against women https://t.co/gsihDHkkfb
— Guardian news (@guardiannews) March 13, 2021
"These days women still walk home with keys threaded through anxious knuckles, only to switch on their computers to find death and rape threats. We are supposed to shrug these things off, treat them as normal, rather than normalised." @catherine_mayer https://t.co/3ZgVKP7oV0
— Best for Britain (@BestForBritain) March 13, 2021
The disappearance and suspected murder of 33-year-old Sarah Everard has renewed concern about women’s safety worldwide pic.twitter.com/wf4ICD9VEv
— NowThis (@nowthisnews) March 13, 2021
Vigil in Clapham Common tonight for Sarah Everard #ReclaimTheseStreets | pics via @ReutersUK pic.twitter.com/w4MVL43zu4
— Karen Morrison (@karenmorrison1) March 13, 2021
Priti Patel one of the most absurd, hypocritical and blind to reality, published on Tuesday a bill relating to the policing of UK protests. The function is simple: to silence them.
— Dr. Jennifer Cassidy (@OxfordDiplomat) March 13, 2021
This is not a metaphor. It is the explicit function of the legislation. https://t.co/SYc6ajs6h2
Beyond this candle is Tooting Common- I walk there every day with my dog. Tonight, I walked past holding keys in my hand…#SheWasJustWalkingHome pic.twitter.com/dzwLsYRgI0
— Dr. Eve Corner 💙 (@EveCorner) March 13, 2021