Special
Section:
International Progress in the VAW Movement
Violence
Begins at Home
by
Ignacio Ramonet
In
Europe right now the statistics of male
violence against female partners are terrible.
For European women aged 16 to 44, violence in
the home is the primary cause of injury and
death, more lethal than road accidents and
cancer. Between 25 and 50 percent of women are
victims of this violence. In Portugal, 52.8
percent of women say that they have been
violently treated by their husbands or
partners. In Germany almost 300 women a
year—or three women every four days—are
killed by men with whom they used to live. In
Britain, one woman dies in similar
circumstances every three days. In Spain it is
one every four days.
In
France six women die this way every month: 33
percent of them are knifed, 33 percent shot,
20 percent strangled, and 10 percent beaten. (Henrion
Report, 2001) In the 15 member states of the
European Union (before enlargement to 25),
more than 600 women died every year because of
sexist brutality in the family. (Amnesty
International, 2004)
The
profile of the aggressor is not what you might
imagine. There is a public perception that
these types of killers tend to be from poor
backgrounds and with little education. That is
not the case. The death of the actress Marie
Trintignant, who was killed on August 6, 2003
by her partner, a famous artist, is an
example.
A report from the Council of Europe (Keltosova,
2002) says that “it is even proved that the
incidence of domestic violence seems to
increase with income and level of
education.” She stresses that in the
Netherlands, “almost half of all those who
commit violence against women hold university
degrees.” In France, attackers are usually
men whose professional status gives them a
degree of power. A sizeable percentage of the
attackers are management personnel (67
percent), health professionals (25 percent),
and officers in the police or army. (Henrion
Report, 2001)
Another misconception is that violence of this
kind is more common in the macho cultures of
southern Europe than in northern countries.
Here, too, the image needs adjustment. Romania
is the European country with the worst record:
every year, almost 13 in every million women
there are killed by their male partners.
However, next on the dismal honours list come
countries where women’s rights are highly
respected. In Finland, more than eight in
every million women are killed in the home
every year. The list runs on down through
Norway (6.58), Luxembourg (5.56), Denmark
(5.42), and Sweden (4.59). In fact, Italy,
Spain, Portugal, and Ireland come at the
bottom of the list.
Such violence is worldwide: it happens in all
countries, on all continents, and in all
social, economic, religious, and cultural
groups. Women, of course, may also be violent
in their relationships with men; we didn’t
need the images of women soldiers from the
United States torturing detainees in Abu
Ghraib prison in Iraq to confirm that there
are women torturers. (Halimi, 2004) Homosexual
relationships are not exempt from violence,
either. But mostly women are the victims of
violence.
This violence—to which feminist groups have
long drawn government attention (World March
of Women, 2002)—is so virulent globally that
we must regard it as a major violation of
human rights. It is a major public-health
issue: not just the physical attacks, however
murderous, but also psychological violence,
threats and intimidation, and sexual
brutality. In many cases, all these forms of
violence coincide.
The fact that this violence happens in the
home of the victim has always been a pretext
for authorities to wash their hands and
declare that it is a private domestic matter.
Such an attitude is a collective refusal to
help people in danger. It is also shocking
hypocrisy since by now we have learned that
the private is also political. This kind of
violence is a reflection of historically
unequal power relations between men and women,
the result of the institution of patriarchy, a
system based on the idea of a natural
inferiority of women and a biological
supremacy of men.
This
system generates such violence. It needs to be
eliminated by appropriate laws. Some may
object that this will take time. So why not
start immediately, as many feminist
organisations have demanded, by setting up a
permanent international tribunal on violence
against women?
From
Le Monde diplomatique, English language
edition, July 2004. Translated
by Ed Emery. ALL RIGHTS RESERVED © 1997-2004
Le Monde diplomatique. Reprinted with
permission. Available online at http://MondeDiplo.com/2004/07/01ramonet.
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References
Amnesty
International, London (2004) “See: It’s in
our hands: Stop violence against women; Les
violences contre les femmes en France: Une
enquête nationale,” La
Documentation française, Paris: June
2002; World
Report on Violence and Health, chapter 4,
“Intimate partner violence,” World Health
Organisation, Geneva: 2002.
Henrion
Report (2001), Paris: Ministry of Health.
Halimi,
Gisèle (2004) “Tortionnaire, nom
feminine,” Libération,
Paris, 18 June.
Keltosova,
Olga (2002) Report
on Domestic Violence, Council of Europe,
Strasbourg.
World
March of Women (2002) Demands
to Eliminate Violence Against Women,
presented to the World Social Forum in Porto
Alegre, January 2002.