British justice minister Dominic Raab has come under fire after saying that "misogyny is wrong, whether it's a man against a woman or a woman against a man".
His confusion about the definition arose during an interview with the BBC in which he was asked why the British government rejected calls for misogyny to be made a hate crime in the wake of the murder of Sarah Everard.
"If you don't know what misogyny is then you're never going to find it," Nazir Afzal, who has prosecuted grooming gangs and celebrity sexual abusers, wrote on Twitter.
Misogyny is hatred aimed at women, while misandry targets men.
"What I meant was ... if we are talking about, effectively, insults with a sexist basis, I don't think that criminalising those sorts of things will deal with the problem that we have got at the heart of the Sarah Everard case," Mr Raab said.
"Criminalising insulting language - even if it's misogynistic - does not deal with the intimidation, the violence and the much higher level of offence and damage and harm that we really ought to be laser-like focused in on," the former foreign secretary said.
Justice Secretary Dominic Raab MP was asked on #BBCBreakfast whether he believed misogyny should be treated as a hate crime.
— BBC Breakfast (@BBCBreakfast) October 6, 2021
He said "misogyny is absolutely wrong whether it's a man against a woman, or a woman against a man"https://t.co/RIWo6f2kXN pic.twitter.com/8RGrwhlnnF
The government yesterday announced an independent inquiry into "systematic failures" in policing, after an officer serving in London was jailed for life for Ms Everard's kidnap, rape and murder.
The death of the 33-year-old marketing consultant led to an outcry over violence against women and girls in Britain.
Wayne Couzens, 48, who served in the Metropolitan Police diplomatic protection unit, falsely arrested Ms Everard as she walked home from a friend's house, on the pretence that she had broken coronavirus restrictions in place at the time.
Mr Raab was speaking at his Conservative Party's annual conference in Manchester, northwest England, shortly before Prime Minister Boris Johnson's keynote speech.