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EU-wide effort on gender-based violence taking shape, but gaps remain

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EU-wide effort on gender-based violence taking shape, but gaps remain

On New 12 months’s Day this 12 months, three ladies have been discovered lifeless in numerous elements of France. All had been killed within the earlier 24 hours by their companions. 

The brutal murders prompted a wave of protest and outcry that, in 2022 in one of many richest international locations of the world, the federal government had didn’t deal with femicide.

Femicide is the phrase given to the violent homicide of ladies and women due to their gender.

The time period was coined in 1976 by the feminist Diana E H Russell and was formally outlined by the United Nations within the 2012 Vienna Declaration.

Femicide consists of murders from intimate associate violence, honour violence, violence on account of sexuality and gender id, and focused killings (for instance of feminist activists).

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The problem for organisations working to deal with femicide is getting states and police forces to recognise it and take motion to prosecute offenders and forestall these crimes.

“The impression that femicide has is way larger than murder as a result of typically we’ve got youngsters that abruptly are orphans, and we’ve got household that abruptly should care for two or extra individuals,” stated Christina Fabre from the European Institute for Gender Equality (EIGE).

Kids who’ve misplaced their mom by means of femicide usually tend to have challenges all through their life from academic attainment to well being.

All of this has an additional knock-on value to society and to the financial system – EIGE estimates gender-based violence prices Europe round €366 billion annually and hopes that quantifying this impression will immediate motion.

“We determined simply to give attention to probably the most prevalent types of violence towards ladies. That was intimate associate violence, rape, and femicide,” stated Fabre.

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The European institute labored to develop a standard set of definitions and indicators that could possibly be collected throughout Europe to offer the true image of gender-based violence.

In 2020, they recorded 444 instances of femicide throughout Europe – virtually actually an underestimate.

The EIGE can be engaged on enhancing the authorized responses to femicide throughout EU member states.

“Many of the member states had loads of resistance in utilizing the time period [femicide],” stated Fabre.

Numerous their work on that is having to persuade member states that the problem exists and might be recognized.

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In lots of instances the place ladies are murdered it’s troublesome to show that gender was a particular issue motivating a perpetrator, Fabre explains. This is the reason contextual components like how the physique was discovered or the earlier felony historical past of the perpetrator can reveal their motivation for homicide.

In lots of instances, the justice course of ends as a result of the perpetrator has died by suicide shortly after committing femicide.

“If we predict that femicide is only a crime, however we’re not analysing the developments, after which we’re not considering the motivations of those crimes, we’ll by no means stop them,” Fabre stated.

Even inside the class of femicide, there are particular forms of femicide that may and must be recorded to be able to higher reply.

For instance, whereas most states recognise and report murders the place intimate associate violence was concerned, there may be not the identical strategy when intercourse work or trafficking are an element.

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Spain introduced on the finish of final 12 months that it could turn out to be the primary EU member to report all femicides, together with the place trafficking and exploitation have been components within the homicide.

This transfer by the Spanish authorities adopted a wave of protests towards femicide after the homicide of two women by their father.

In Italy, the federal government handed a brand new regulation in June on gender-based violence, considered one of three since 2019, which included higher recording of information.

Earlier than the regulation took impact, the ministries of well being, justice and inside weren’t obliged to gather information on gender-based violence, stated Giusy Muratore, a senior researcher on the Italian Nationwide Institute of Statistics (ISTAT).

Muratore and her colleagues at ISTAT perform a pattern survey of 25,000 ladies on gender-based violence, together with work with survivors of home violence.

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This data is used each by NGOs to advocate and marketing campaign towards gender-based violence, and by parliamentarians to design coverage.

“Girls’s organisations and feminists have been engaged on this for many years, and there was full inaction by the EU,” stated Malin Björk, an MEP for the Swedish Left Get together.

Efforts to get the EU to ratify the Istanbul Conference have beforehand been derailed by factions within the EU that need the duty for tackling gender-based violence to stay at a state degree, and by those that oppose the whole idea of gender-based violence, she defined.

Whereas all EU member states have signed the Conference, it has not been ratified by Bulgaria, Czechia, Hungary, Latvia, Lithuania and Slovakia. Poland additionally introduced in 2020 that it could withdraw from the Conference.

“The parliament has been calling for extra assets to fight gender-based violence and extra devices,” she stated.

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These devices could possibly be motion plans, suggestions or budgetary assets or legislative devices.

Nonetheless, this 12 months on Worldwide Girls’s Day, the EU Fee lastly put ahead a brand new directive on gender-based violence.

The proposals embody: higher sufferer assist, safeguards and safety, along with entry to compensation, countering cyberviolence and higher illustration within the felony justice system.

Björk and colleagues within the parliament are nonetheless within the early stage of scrutinising the proposed laws, however she is cautiously constructive, acknowledging that it’s a “large step” however with gaps.

“I believe we want extra work on prevention. I’m the primary to say that, so long as the justice system is functioning the way in which it does at present, there isn’t any justice for ladies, as a result of the conviction charges are ridiculously low. However I do additionally recognise that we do not need to find yourself having victims. So, we have to put extra effort into prevention,” she stated.

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For Björk, these prevention measures embody: non-sexist schooling, a feminist curriculum, with the ability to depart violent companions and having housing and childcare in place.

“As a feminist, I believe it is so fundamental. That to stay a life free from violence is a baseline for having equality between men and women,” Björk stated.

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El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele cements power as he begins second term

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El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele cements power as he begins second term

After February landslide win, 42-year-old set to govern for another five years with near-total control of parliament and other state institutions.

El Salvador’s President Nayib Bukele is set to be sworn in for a second term, riding on a wave of popularity that has helped him consolidate his power and influence in the country.

The 42-year-old, who unapologetically describes himself as a “cool dictator”, was re-elected in February with 85 percent of the vote. He is set to govern for another five years with near-total control of parliament and other state institutions.

The former publicist and mayor will take the oath of office at the National Palace in the capital, San Salvador, on Saturday.

The ceremony is due to be attended by dignitaries including Spanish King Felipe VI and Argentinian President Javier Milei, with whom Bukele shares an admiration for former United States President Donald Trump, whose son and namesake is also attending the event.

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On Friday, inauguration preparations were disrupted by reports that police thwarted a plot to detonate explosives at locations across the country.

Bukele enjoys sky-high approval ratings due to his brutal crackdown on criminal gangs, credited with returning a sense of normalcy to a violence-fatigued society.

The campaign has drawn criticism from rights groups but has made Bukele the most popular leader in Latin America, according to a regional poll.

Bukele’s New Ideas party scored a near-clean sweep in legislative elections, where it took 54 of 60 seats.

Yet experts warn his extended honeymoon with voters may be nearing its end as economic worries overtake safety concerns in the public discourse, amid high government debt and fast-rising prices for consumer goods in a country where more than a quarter of the six million population lives in poverty.

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Food inflation, meanwhile, has outpaced salary increases while public debt has skyrocketed on his watch to more than $30bn, or 84 percent of the country’s gross domestic product (GDP).

Argentina’s President Javier Milei takes part in a welcome ceremony with El Salvador’s Minister of Foreign Affairs Alexandra Hill Tinoco as Milei arrives to participate in Bukele’s second term inauguration ceremony [Jose Cabezas/Reuters]

Gangs as a ‘cancer’

Bukele will have even more power in his second term after the legislative assembly approved a reform that will make it easier for him to push through constitutional changes.

The president has laughed off criticism of authoritarian tendencies, but he was only able to seek re-election after a loyalist Supreme Court ruling allowed him to bypass a constitutional ban on successive terms.

“What he has demonstrated is that the law is irrelevant and that he can do whatever he wants, how he wants,” public policy expert Carlos Carcach told AFP news agency, describing Bukele as an “all-powerful” president.

With his preferred getup of jeans and a baseball cap, millennial Bukele came to power in 2019 promising to crush the country’s gangs, to which he attributes some 120,000 murders over three decades – more than the 75,000 lives lost in El Salvador’s civil war from 1980 to 1992.

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During Bukele’s first term, authorities rounded up more than 80,000 presumed gangsters under a state of emergency in place since March 2022 that allows for arrest without a warrant.

His government also built the largest prison in Latin America to hold them.

The result, Bukele has boasted, has been turning “the murder capital of the world, the world’s most dangerous country, into the safest country in the Western Hemisphere”.

But it has come at a cost.

Human Rights Watch and Amnesty International have reported the killing and torture of detainees, and thousands of innocent people – including minors – among those arrested.

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15 years on, the Tamil survivors of Sri Lanka's brutal civil war live in fear — and disempowerment

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15 years on, the Tamil survivors of Sri Lanka's brutal civil war live in fear — and disempowerment

MULLAITIVU, Sri Lanka (AP) — At the site of a bloody battlefield that marked the end of Sri Lanka’s civil war, Singaram Soosaimuthu fishes every day with his son, casting nets and reeling them in.

It is a skill he has known for much of his life — and one that he had to relearn after a devastating injury. The former Tamil fighter lost both legs in 2009 as the nation’s generation-long civil war drew to a close and the Tamils retreated in defeat.

Making something of himself despite his injuries brought Soosaimuthu success — an achievement in which he finds profound meaning. He sees his fellow ethnic Tamils in the same light: To regain their voice, they must thrive.

But defeat — bloody, protracted and decisive — has brought Sri Lanka’s minority Tamil community to a point of despair.

Some parents have given up hope of ever learning the fate of the thousands of missing children. Parts of the Tamil lands are decimated, with poor infrastructure and fewer economic opportunities. Survivors have lived under surveillance for years, and many now feel that members of the rising generation have grown too fearful and apathetic toward speaking up for their rights.

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“There is a clear agenda underway to degenerate a defeated community,” says Selvin Ireneus, a social activist based in Jaffna, the Tamils’ northern cultural heartland.

The government, he says, doesn’t want today’s Tamils to be politically evolved. After fighting ended, he asserts, narcotics and other vices have been systematically introduced into the region. “They only want them to eat, drink and enjoy and not have a political ideology,” Ireneus said. “This has happened with all defeated communities in the world.”

The island nation of 20 million is overwhelmingly ethnically Sinhalese, with the Tamil community making up about 11% of the population. The separatist civil war broke out in 1983 after years of failed attempts to share power within a unified country, with Tamil fighters — known as the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam, or simply the Tamil Tigers — eventually creating a de facto independent homeland in the country’s north.

The group was crushed in a 2009 government offensive. The war killed at least 100,000 on both sides, and left many more missing.

Though not all Tamils were part of or supported the Tamil Tiger rebel group, their defeat has effectively become a political defeat to the community. They have lost their bargaining power.

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“What is remaining now is a very small community, and they don’t have the courage … to show dissent,” says K.T. Ganeshalingam, head of political science at the University of Jaffna.

Sri Lanka’s government had promised the United Nations and countries like India and the United States that they would share power with the Tamil-majority areas to resolve the causes that led to the civil war. However, successive governments have not followed up.

Fifteen years on, some in Tamil areas are still in denial that the armed campaign has been defeated and that the rebel leader Velupillai Prabhakaran, who was seen as invincible, has been killed. Sections of the expatriate Tamils in Europe have been claiming that Prabhakaran would return soon to take on the campaign to the next stage, including a woman who claims to be his daughter and is said to be collecting donations in his name.

Prabhakaran’s nephew in Denmark, Karthic Manoharan, says the time has come to put a stop to the rumors and state, emphatically, that the leader is dead.

“We don’t have any doubt regarding (his death) because he loved his country so much. And he’s not a coward to run from the country and live in another country, in a different country to save himself, his wife and his daughter,” Manoharan says.

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Such beliefs are more than simply inaccurate, says Ganeshalingam; they’re genuinely harmful to any possible future that the Tamil people are trying to chart. He wonders: “If I have not grasped the fact that I am defeated, how can I rise from that?”

Discussing the Tamil Tigers’ defeat, their past mistakes and even Prabhakaran’s death is discouraged in Tamil society, especially in the diaspora. Ganeshalingam says such attitudes have created a stagnation in Tamil politics.

Political leaders are divided and are in disarray. A political alliance that the Tamil Tigers formed is fragmented with many leaders breaking away to form their own parties. Civil activists are now working to unify them and strengthen their bargaining position ahead of the presidential election later this year.

In the villages of Mullaitivu district, where the final battle between government forces and the Tamil Tigers unfolded, many men are addicted to narcotics and alcohol, forcing women to be the family’s main breadwinners, says Yogeswari Dharmabaskaran, a social worker in the Udaiyarkattu area of Mullaitivu district. School dropouts soar in the villages, she says, as boys find easy money through selling narcotics, illegal tree-felling and the mining of river sand.

In Jaffna, local politician Thiyagaraja Nirosh says family elders discourage young people from discussing political rights. Because of that, it is difficult to find younger candidates to run in local elections.

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“There is fear that talking politics is dangerous. Many family elders do not encourage talking politics,” Nirosh says “The reason is that there has been no justice for the past killings. They see no guarantee that such incidents won’t recur.”

Thayalan Kalaipriya, a former rebel, wonders about the future often. She says her many losses have made her deeply desire unity among all Sri Lankans; at the same time, she says it is painful to realize their efforts to win political rights have been wasted.

Former rebels often do not receive adequate support and at times ex-fighters, like those who conscripted children at the height of the war, are treated with resentment, although she says some respect their commitment and sacrifice.

She finds solace by working with her young children, educating them and helping to give them a good life in a land she hopes is free of civil war and the sad echoes it has caused.

“We teach our children about what happened,” she says, “but never to seek revenge.”

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Associated Press journalist Nat Castañeda in Copenhagen contributed to this report.

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Turkish drone strikes in Syria kill 4 U.S.-backed fighters, wound 11 civilians, Kurdish group says

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Turkish drone strikes in Syria kill 4 U.S.-backed fighters, wound 11 civilians, Kurdish group says

Turkish drone strikes in northeastern Syria on Friday evening killed four U.S.-backed fighters and wounded 11 civilians, the Kurdish-led force said.

The strikes on areas held by the U.S.-backed and Kurdish-led Syrian Democratic Forces came a day after Turkey’s president said his government won’t hesitate to act against Kurdish-led groups in northern Syria if they proceed with plans to hold local elections. It accuses the groups of having links to outlawed Kurdish militants in Turkey.

TURKEY SENTENCES PRO-KURDISH POLITICIANS TO LENGTHY PRISON TERMS OVER DEADLY 2014 RIOTS

The SDF said drone strikes hit its positions eight times as well as civilian homes and vehicles in and near the northern city of Qamishli. Such Turkish strikes are not uncommon in northeastern Syria.

The Kurdish Red Crescent said that as its paramedics were trying to reach the attacked areas, a Turkish strike hit one of its ambulances, putting it out of service. It said the attack occurred near the town of Amouda, west of Qamishli.

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A U.S.-backed force in Syria says Turkish drone strikes in northeastern Syria have killed four Kurdish fighters and wounded 11 civilians. (Fox News Digital)

There was no immediate comment from Turkey.

The Kurdish-led autonomous administration that controls northern and eastern parts of Syria has announced plans to hold municipal elections June 11. The vote to choose mayors will be held in the provinces of Hassakeh, Raqqa, Deir el-Zour and the eastern part of Aleppo province.

On Friday, State Department spokesperson Vedant Patel posted on X that “we don’t think that the conditions for such elections are in place in NE Syria in present time.”

The comments appeared to be a message to Kurdish-led authorities not to hold the elections.

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Turkey, which has conducted military operations in Syria in the past, considers the move a step by Syrian Kurdish militants toward the creation of an independent Kurdish entity across its border. It has described the planned polls as a threat to the territorial integrity of both Syria and Turkey.

“We are closely following the aggressive actions by the terrorist organization against the territorial integrity of our country and of Syria under the pretext of an election,” President Recep Tayyip Erdogan said Thursday.

Turkey considers the Kurdish militia group, known as the People’s Protection Units, as a terrorist group linked to an outlawed Kurdish group that has led an insurgency in Turkey since 1984. That conflict with the Kurdistan Workers’ Party has killed tens of thousands of people.

The People’s Protection Units provide the backbone of the Syrian Democratic Forces, which is a key U.S. ally in the fight against the Islamic State group. American support for the SDF has infuriated Turkey and remains a major source of friction in their relations.

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