Aveline
Sorry Elegran real actual women are not protected under this act. The amendment to include to include sex as a protected characteristic in an attempt to give women the same protection as a man in drag was voted down. So there is protection against 'stirring up hatred' on the basis of someone's race, religion, transgender identity including cross dressing, sexual orientation and age. But not on the basis of sex. Not women. Not girls. 
Apart from this crime being virtually unpoliceable the Law Society has pointed out its many flaws.
This sort of nonsense is part of the direction of travel now. People being no-platformed, 'cancelled', bullied online for simply questioning the way in which women's rights are being pushed aside by transrights is depressingly common.
Did anyone see Caitlin Moran on Twitter the other day? She started with a tweet in solidarity with women's feelings of vulnerability in the wake of the Sarah Everard case, then panicked when she realised that her original comment hadn't explicitly included transwomen, so added another comment to do so, including 'women without wombs' in case they also got offended - it was tortuous.
If would be laughable, if not so serious, that people are already tying themselves in linguistic knots over what should be a straightforward expression of solidarity. Should everything we say be couched in terms that explicitly include every group in society, however small in number, in case they are so self-absorbed that they want to use the murder of a young woman into yet another opportunity to bang their drum?
I think that NS is pandering to the very young, who are more inclined to buy into the trans agenda, as they are statistically more likely to support independence, and can vote in the upcoming elections in Scotland.