Amelie Lens Speaks Out on Safety, Abuse of Power and Accountability in the Techno Scene
The Belgian techno artist shares a powerful Instagram statement calling for cultural change, responsibility and safer dancefloors
Amelie Lens has shared a strong and emotional statement on Instagram addressing safety, abuse of power and accountability within the techno scene.
Without naming specific individuals, the Belgian artist used her platform to speak about the wider culture surrounding harassment, silence and the protection of reputations over people. Her message comes at a time when the hard techno community is facing intense discussion following multiple public allegations involving several artists.
“The dancefloor should be safe”
In a series of black-background text slides, Lens wrote that the dancefloor is a home for many, but that it does not always feel safe. She described how safety has long been treated as a “women’s problem”, forcing women to watch their drinks, monitor doors and protect one another through unspoken signals.
She emphasized that the issue is not about attacking men as a whole, but about accountability for harmful behavior and the culture that allows it to continue.
According to Lens, silence, minimization and prioritizing reputations over people are what sustain the problem.
Challenging the “not all men” argument
In her statement, Lens addressed the common phrase “not all men”, saying that while it is true, it misses the deeper question: when something is wrong, who speaks up? Who interrupts harmful behavior? Who refuses to look away?
She argued that abuse is often not committed by strangers, but by people within social circles, backstage environments or professional settings. This, she said, is what makes the issue uncomfortable and difficult to confront.
Speaking about personal experience
Lens also revealed that she personally experienced a serious situation involving threats. She described going to the police with extensive evidence, only to feel unsupported by the legal response.
Her message highlighted how difficult it can be to prove harassment, sexual assault or abuse of power, especially when there are no witnesses. She stated that many survivors remain silent because they fear doubt, scrutiny and reputational consequences.
A call for cultural change
Toward the end of her statement, Lens called for breaking what she described as a cycle of automatic protection within male networks. She urged people to reflect on why accusations arise and to focus on accountability rather than dismissing claims as defamation.
“The truth isn’t defamation”, she wrote. “It is a reckoning.”
Ongoing debate within the techno community
Amelie Lens’ statement adds to a broader conversation currently unfolding in the techno world about responsibility, safety and due process. As discussions continue across social media, promoters, agencies and artists are facing increasing pressure to address how misconduct allegations are handled within the scene.
At this stage, investigations connected to various cases remain ongoing, and no final judicial outcomes have been publicly confirmed.
This remains a developing situation within the international techno community.




