 Rwyf wedi gwneud o'r pethau yn ddechrau dda'r bus stop i wneud i'w swall. Mae'r bus stop yn llwy, yma'n gweithio ar y ddechrau mewn ddechrau a yma'n gogen i ddweud y gweithio'r bus stop i ddweud. Ar y bus stop, dyma'r bus stop wedi gwneud i ddweud, ac mae'r driver wedi gwneud i ddweud i ddweud i ddweud i ddweud i ddweud i ddweud, ac yn ddweud i ddweud i ddweud i ddweud i ddweud. Rwy'n cael ei wneud hefyd i'r rhan o'r rhan o'r hun ar y rhan ac nes yw'n urch o'i i'r cwmru i'r cyfrannu sydd arall. Rwy'n cael ei ddweud. Rwy'n cael ei ddweud eich cyfrannu, Rachel Harding, ar y Fflaesiaeth Llywodraeth i'r Ymddorodd Nogigol i'r wrthym ni'n gweithio i'r unigol ai'r Fflaesiaeth Llywodraeth i'r Ymddorodd Nogigol. Rwy'n cael ei ddweud ar y rhan o'r team o ffordd, revived, social work, law, linguistic and education. And we've wanted to answer this question from an 11-year-old, why is it that street harassment happens? We work with a 115 secondary school students from three different secondary schools, two in the East Midlands and one in London, to try and answer this question. I've been called names, stared at, touched up, Ffotographed, swornat, beeped hat, given the middle finger that we musted about. Chest across a part, cornered, had cars mounting a pavement, followed, had bedbottles thrown. Had bag snaps, filmed on a bus by other passengers, approached to get into cars. We allowed the students space to tell us anything else about their experience as they wanted. This was where we often got further details about what happened and how they felt about it. We were able to tell that most of the street harassment was carried out by mainly adult members of the public, and mainly, but not exclusively, men. I was with my sister and a friend who were sitting at the back of a bus and were stared at. Whilst after, this male took out his camera and started videoing us. We covered our faces and moved. I was in the park with friends, and a man started cornering us, pretending to be on the phone. After five minutes, he started coming towards us, so we grabbed our bikes and went quick. A woman on a bike was behind me and two of my friends, and she was on the phone to someone. Then me and my friends stopped us, I'd reached my house, and we were talking, and then she cycled past me and my friends and yanked my hair and said, it's girls like these. We looked at when the incidents of street harassment took place as reported by the students, and noticed that the experiences could occur whenever a young person was out and about in public. This could be on the way to or from school, but could also be when they were out and about with their friends after school or at the weekend. It also didn't seem to matter what time of the day or night, whether it was summer or winter or what clothing was worn. Young people can be street harassed whenever or wherever they go.