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“Not one more”: thousands rally in Belfast against gender-based violence

Robert Freeman by Robert Freeman
27 April 2026
in Analysis, UK
Reading Time: 4 mins read
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Thousands of protestors marched in Belfast at the weekend to condemn the north of Ireland’s appalling rates of violence against women. Between 2020 and 2025, a shocking 30 women were murdered. This is the highest rate across Britain and Ireland, and over three times the figure in the south of Ireland for the same period.

The socialist-feminist movement ROSA organised the march. The route went from the Royal Courts of Justice to City Hall. Protestors held banners reading “Not One More”, meaning no one else should suffer the fate of women like Natalie McNally. She was horrifically murdered by her partner in 2022 while 15 weeks pregnant.

Natalie’s brother Brendan spoke at the City Hall. He said of his sister:

I knew her as the gentlest of people who would have sympathised for anyone in a difficult situation. She worked here in Belfast and supported and was involved in various activist movements.

“Criminal negligence”: vulnerable women left exposed by housing shortage

People Before Profit’s Fiona Ferguson cited the economic factors endangering women under our cruel capitalist model:

In 2026, violent misogyny and sexism should be a relic of the past, it should be a matter for the dustbin of history. But the reality is that right now, today, far too many women in our society are living in violent homes that they cannot escape from.

There are no public houses available because the waiting lists are too long. Refuges are oversubscribed because cuts have been made by the storming executives to services like women did. And women do not have economic freedom because of cuts to social security and they cannot escape. That’s criminal negligence.

The latest horrendous figures show 50,000 people waiting for a home. Ferguson’s comments echo those we previously reported from Sinn Féin MLA Deirdre Hargey, who called out:

…blockages in housing for women who are in situations where there is violence perpetrated against them.

ROSA themselves have cited the need to “end poverty wages” and fight back against an economic order that:

…allows wealthy and powerful men to abuse ordinary people rampantly.

Ferguson also slammed the far-right who falsely claim to act as the protectors of women and children:

We are facing a growing global right-wing movement that is coming for our rights. Fuck them! Right here in Ireland, North and South, there are people who want to see the politics of Donald Trump brought to our streets and brought to our doorsteps.

We cannot let them. Some of those people are organising far-right rallies in our city centre. Some of them are writing laws in Stormont.

One of the ways that the far-right are trying to grow is by using the fear that women face every day. Fear of violence, fear of sexual harassment, fear of rape and fear of femicide. And they want us to blame migrants and they want us to blame trans people. We won’t do it.

Research by The Detail found that:

Almost half those arrested for race hate disorder in Belfast last August had previously been reported to the PSNI for domestic abuse…

Continuing austerity in Belfast impacting women

ROSA asked women why they were marching in Belfast. One activist said:

I’m marching against gender-based violence because Stormont claims to care about violence against women and girls while making cuts to vital voluntary and charitable services that support victims and survivors.

This is likely a reference to changes the Department of Health made to grant allocation in 2023, that resulted in some women’s support charities losing money.

Another recent change by Westminster resulted in a nearly £16 million drop to funding of voluntary and community sector organisations in the Six Counties, particularly those providing support for unemployed people. Stormont has not found a way to plug the gap. The Northern Ireland Council for Voluntary Action (NICVA) specifically cited the impact this would have on women.

Despite the many moving placards at the protest, ROSA used their Facebook platform to call for people to get actively involved in campaigning for an end to misogynistic violence:

Not one more can’t just be a slogan – it must be a call to action! DM this page if you want to be involved in a campaign against gender based violence.

Featured image via ROSA

Tags: austerityNorthern Irelandprotest
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Comments 2

  1. Airlane1979 says:
    1 month ago

    Across recent years in Northern Ireland the majority of homicide victims are male (typically around two-thirds to three-quarters each year). I’m not sure why the media portrays the victims as largely female. This disproportion is common in every society. I suspect what we have here is normal valuing of female lives over male lives, which has gone on throughout history. This differential by no means is incompatible with vicious misogyny. Even fascists claim to regard deliberately harming women as far worse than harming men.

    Reply
  2. Annie Galt says:
    1 month ago

    How many of those male homicide victims were killed by their partner? It’s not that these male deaths don’t matter. The pattern here is male violence against women , and how they need escape routes. Are you saying these women shouldn’t protest because they should put male homicides before the women that lost their lives? In regards to fascists remember the percentage of men who were involved in anti-migrant protests had previous domestic violence allegations. Male violence is the problem. This is a specific form of male violence being addressed.

    Reply

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