📰 English Version — Detailed News Summary

 The UK government has announced a major new strategy to tackle violence against women and girls (VAWG), which includes training teachers in England to spot and challenge misogyny in schools. This plan is part of an ambitious effort to halve violence against women and girls within the next decade. 

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Under the new measures:


Teachers across England will receive specialist training to identify early signs of misogynistic attitudes and behaviour in pupils, particularly boys. They will learn how to recognise and respond to harmful beliefs and steer students away from them. 


Schools will introduce expanded lessons on issues such as healthy relationships, consent, online harassment, and the risks of sharing intimate images online. 


Pupils showing worrying behaviour may be referred for additional support or behavioural programmes aimed at challenging prejudiced views about women and girls. 


The strategy includes a £20 million funding package, with pilot schemes starting in 2026 and plans to roll out mandatory healthy relationship education in all secondary schools by 2029


Prime Minister Sir Keir Starmer said the policy is meant to stop “toxic ideas” early before they take root, ensuring that girls can feel safe at school, online and in relationships. 



This initiative is part of a broader government strategy that also aims to improve support services for victims, strengthen law enforcement responses, and educate students about digital harms.








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