She was told 'upskirting' was not a crime in England and Wales — so she made it one
Gina Martin, 26, campaigned to make it illegal to surreptitiously snap photographs up people's skirts

Gina Martin, 26, has spent the last two years of her life fighting to make it illegal to take "upskirting" photos.
When Britain's Parliament finally approved the law on Tuesday, she said it took her a few minutes to absorb her hard-fought victory.
"I kind of just smiled and carried on as normal, and then I turned around to my mom and she was crying her eyes out," Martin told As It Happens host Carol Off.
"And that's kind of when it hit me that it was quite a big thing to do, and now I'm starting to feel proud of myself."
The law, which makes the practice of snapping surreptitious photos up people's skirts a sexual offence, will take effect as soon as it achieves royal assent from the Queen.
'There's nothing we can do about this'
Martin's battle started when she was at a music festival in London's Hyde Park in 2017 with her sister.
"This group of guys were kind of, I guess, hitting on me and trying to get my attention. They were being quite rude, and I said no as many times as I could without getting angry," she said.
"I felt one of them brush up against me, but I didn't think anything of it because we were in a crowd."
Then she saw it — a photograph that one of the men had snapped from beneath her skirt using his phone.
We fought the law and... WE WON. <br><br>Upskirting will be a sexual offence. <br><br>