World
Europe must do more to end gender-based violence
These of us working in European politics understand how tough it’s to deliver 27 member states collectively.
It’s much more tough in a political system that’s nonetheless dominated by patriarchal buildings, with latent misogynist tics that emerge every now and then.
That’s the reason we shouldn’t be stunned by Sofagate-type scenes through which European Fee President, Ursula Von der Leyen, is ignored and patronised by overseas leaders.
It’s simply the tip of the iceberg.
Unequal remedy is a day by day actuality for most ladies and despite the fact that we’re bettering in areas like equal pay and breaking the glass ceiling, essentially the most brutal type of misogyny – gender-based violence – is commonly essentially the most hidden, and due to this fact the toughest to eradicate.
Lately, now we have made essential achievements for equality because of the tireless insistence of progressive forces.
We now have ladies heading the fee, the parliament, and the European Central Financial institution. We’ve a gender-balanced school of commissioners, and obligatory quotas for girls on boards.
However now we have some essential unfinished enterprise: an obligation in direction of essentially the most weak ladies, those that are victims of violence simply because they’re ladies.
Day-after-day seven ladies die within the EU as victims of gender-based violence, most frequently killed by their companions.
Between 12% and 15% of girls dwell in hell every day. They don’t make the entrance pages however they need assistance to flee that circle of despair: they want psychological, monetary, and judicial help.
For years, the Socialists and Democrats have been calling for a European technique towards gender-based violence, together with a binding instrument.
For this reason when our political group within the European Parliament backed the working programme of President Von der Leyen, we demanded a legislative proposal to finish this scourge.
Greater than two years have handed and eventually, the fee has introduced that on 8 March it’ll current a directive to stop and combat violence towards ladies and home violence.
As a result of opposition of some governments within the council, now we have not been capable of embody gender-based violence as against the law in Article 83 of the treaty.
Violence towards ladies is a severe offence and it ought to be thought of alongside human trafficking and the sexual exploitation of girls and youngsters.
The brand new directive pays particular consideration to prevention, help, and protecting measures. It must also oblige member states to make sure that violence by an intimate accomplice is a decisive issue when analyzing custody circumstances.
This directive is yet one more aspect in a worldwide technique in want of many different authorized devices, in addition to different coordinated actions geared toward altering mentalities, exposing the injustice and anachronism of subordinating half of the world’s inhabitants, losing their skills, and denying them their dignity.
We should sort out sexual harassment in new spheres, from sports activities – the place we nonetheless see some outdated behaviour unacceptable within the twenty first century – to the web and new applied sciences, the place ladies are 27 occasions extra doubtless than males to face harassment.
This yr on 8 March we are going to take yet one more step with the European directive, however we nonetheless have an extended method to go in Europe, and on the earth. We will’t neglect the Afghan ladies, a few of whose representatives I lately met with in Brussels and I promised we might sustain our help.
Neither can we neglect the ladies who’re victims of genital mutilation or early organized marriages.
Right now, our ideas are particularly with the ladies in warfare zones and our hearts are with each the Ukrainian ladies who determined to remain and combat for his or her nation and people who have escaped, many with babies or aged family, looking for a secure refuge.
_Iratxe García Pérez is the president of the Socialists and Democrats within the European Parliament. _
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World
Man in India regains consciousness before his cremation on funeral pyre: reports
A 25-year-old man who was declared dead and about to be cremated in India this week was found to be still alive by witnesses, according to reports.
Rohitash Kumar, 25, who was deaf and mute, was declared dead at a hospital in the state of Rajasthan in the northwestern part of India without a post-mortem examination, according to The Times of India.
Once it was clear Kumar was alive at his cremation on Thursday afternoon, his family reportedly took him back to a hospital where he died early Friday morning.
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Three doctors involved in declaring Kumar dead at the Bhagwan Das Khetan district hospital have since been suspended, the newspaper reported.
Kumar had suffered an epileptic seizure and was declared dead after he flatlined while doctors were performing CPR on him, the Daily Mail reported, citing the AFP news service.
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“The situation was nothing short of a miracle,” a witness at the funeral pyre told local news outlet ETV Bharat. “We all were in shock. He was declared dead, but there he was, breathing and alive.”
Ramavtar Meena, a government official in Rajasthan’s Jhunjhunu district, called the incident “serious negligence.”
“Action will be taken against those responsible. The working style of the doctors will also be thoroughly investigated,” he said.
Meena added that a committee had been formed to investigate the incident.
World
Thousands march across Europe protesting violence against women
Violence against women and girls remains largely unreported due to the impunity, silence, stigma and shame surrounding it.
Thousands marched across France and Italy protesting violence against women on Saturday – two days before the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women.
Those demonstrating protested all forms of violence against women – whether it be sexual, physical, psychological and economic.
The United Nations designated 25 November as the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women. The goal is to raise awareness of the violence women are subjected to and the reality that the scale and nature of the issue is often hidden.
Activists demonstrated partially naked in Rome, hooded in balaclavas to replicate the gesture of Iranian student Ahoo Daryaei, who stripped in front of a university in Tehran to protest the country’s regime.
In France, demonstrations were planned in dozens of cities like Paris, Marseille and Lille.
More than 400 organisations reportedly called for demonstrations across the country amidst widespread shock caused by the Pelicot mass rape trial.
Violence against women and girls remains one of the most prevalent and pervasive human rights violations in the world, according to the United Nations. Globally, almost one in three women have been subjected to physical and/or sexual violence at least once in their life.
For at least 51,100 women in 2023, the cycle of gender-based violence ended with their murder by partners or family members. That means a woman was killed every ten minutes.
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