How one woman's death has sparked a national conversationpublished at 12:45 Greenwich Mean Time 15 March 2021
"Missing: Please Help Our dear friend Sarah Everard," read the posters that went up on south London streets and local social media forums in the days after the 33-year-old disappeared on her walk home in early March.
In the days that followed, concern grew to alarm, then dread, then fear, shock and sadness.
The case had touched a nerve, particularly as walking is one of the few activities to have been allowed during Britain's coronavirus lockdown.
Women across the country took to social media to discuss their own experiences of walking the streets and the lengths they went to to feel safe. Out poured stories of being followed, harassed, catcalled, assaulted and exposed to.
One tweet asking women if they have ever faked phone calls, changed route, or even run in fear after feeling threatened by men in public spaces was liked more than 120,000 times.
Anna Birley was one of many people in recent days to have underlined that the narrative around women's safety must change.
She helped plan a vigil at Clapham Common - one of several around the country - as a way of "reclaiming our public spaces and coming together to feel a level of solidarity".
But it became controversial when it resulted in clashes with police and women were seen being physically restrained.