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Women’s vote campaigner statue unveiled in London

The first statue of a woman in London's Parliament Square was unveiled on Tuesday to celebrate the 100th anniversary of women winning the right to vote in Britain.

Britain’s Prime Minister Theresa May speaks during the unveiling of a statue of suffragist and women’s rights campaigner Millicent Fawcett, by British artist Gillian Wearing, in Parliament Square in London on April 24, 2018. The first statue of a woman on Parliament Square in London was to be unveiled on April 24 to celebrate the 100th anniversary of women winning the right to vote in Britain. The statue of women’s rights campaigner Millicent Fawcett will stand alongside those of 11 men, including Britain’s wartime leader Winston Churchill, Indian independence icon Mahatma Gandhi and anti-apartheid leader Nelson Mandela. / AFP PHOTO / Adrian DENNIS

The first statue of a woman in London’s Parliament Square was unveiled on Tuesday to celebrate the 100th anniversary of women winning the right to vote in Britain.

The statue of women’s rights campaigner Millicent Fawcett will stand alongside those of 11 men, including Britain’s wartime leader Winston Churchill, Indian independence icon Mahatma Gandhi and anti-apartheid figurehead Nelson Mandela.

Prime Minister Theresa May — Britain’s second female premier after Margaret Thatcher — led the unveiling ceremony.

Were it not for Fawcett, “I would not be here today as prime minister, no female MPs would have taken their seats in parliament, none of us would have the rights we now enjoy,” May said.

“The struggle to achieve votes for women was long and arduous,” and Fawcett “devoted her life to the cause”.

May said Fawcett faced decades of fierce opposition as she campaigned on women’s rights throughout Britain and the wider world.

“It is right and proper that, today, she takes her place at the heart of our democracy,” May said, whilst warning that the fight for equality was “far from won”.

The statue marks February’s centenary of the Representation of the People Act, which extended the vote to around eight million women aged over 30.

It was not until 1928 that British women gained the same voting rights as men, but the 1918 act was a major step that put the kingdom ahead of some contemporaries such as France.

Courage
The campaign for a statue of a woman opposite the British parliament started with an online petition two years ago by feminist campaigner Caroline Criado Perez.

London Mayor Sadiq Khan said: “Finally, Parliament Square is no longer a male-only zone for statues.”

The statue was created by British artist Gillian Wearing, who won the 1997 Turner Prize for visual arts. She is the first woman to produce a statue for Parliament Square.

The monument shows Fawcett holding a placard reading “Courage Calls To Courage Everywhere”, in tribute to a speech she gave upon the death of Suffragette Emily Wilding Davidson at the 1913 Epsom Derby horse race.

Fawcett herself was a Suffragist, part of a moderate movement that predated the more militant Suffragettes.

She is best known for her campaigns to improve women’s opportunities in higher education and was a co-founder of the women-only Newnham College at Cambridge University.

She was also president of the National Union of Women’s Suffrage Societies between 1897 and 1901.

Fawcett died in 1929 aged 82.

The 11 pre-existing statues in the square are of former British prime ministers Churchill, David Lloyd George, Viscount Palmerston, the Earl of Derby, Benjamin Disraeli, Robert Peel and George Canning; South Africa’s PM Jan Smuts and president Mandela; US president Abraham Lincoln, and Gandhi.

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