Home Office launches advertising campaign on no sex without consent
The Home Office has launched a controversial advertising campaign, warning men that they could go to jail for rape if they have sex without consent.

The Home Office has launched a controversial advertising campaign, warning men that they could go to jail for rape if they have sex without consent.
The £400,000 No means no campaign will see adverts in lads magazines, on radio stations and in pub washrooms, targeting young men aged 18-24 to raise awareness and understanding of consent.
The campaign aims to reduce incidents of rape by ensuring that men understand they need to gain active consent before they have sex. A spokesman for the Home Office said:
Consent is at the centre of the offence of rape. The Sexual Offences Act 2003 set down, for the first time, that a defendant in a rape case would need to show that they have reasonable grounds to believe that the other person had given their consent. The Act also introduced a definition of consent that a person consents if s/he agrees by choice, and has the freedom and capacity to make that choice.
The campaign will run until the end of April, and aims to reduce the number of offences committed and increase reporting rates.
Launching the campaign, Home Office Minister Fiona Mactaggart said: For a long time, work to raise awareness of sexual violence has focused on the need for women to take responsibility for their personal safety. That is still important, but I believe that we need to start putting the onus onto men and make them aware of their responsibilities.
I want young men to see these adverts and realise that they should not be having sex unless they have secured the consent of the other person. Our campaign is not saying don`t have sex; it is about ensuring that sex is mutually agreed.
Victims of crime often feel they are to blame for the offence, they are not perpetrators are. But I want to make sure that men, who are most often the perpetrators of this appalling crime, are fully aware of their responsibility to seek consent before having sex.
I hope that greater awareness of the law and a clearer sense of everybodys responsibilities will lead to a reduction in the number of rapes committed.
The campaign has been welcomed by agencies and charities working with victims of rape, including Rape Crisis, whose chair, Nicole Westmarland, said: We hope that this campaign will make men stop and think about whether a person is consenting to intercourse and, importantly, whether they have the capacity to make that decision.