![]() |
| The share by gender of homicides and partner-killings worldwide. (AFP Photo/Maryam EL HAMOUCHI) |
Paris (AFP) - Every day in 2017, 137 women and girls were intentionally killed by their partner or a family member somewhere in the world, according to UN statistics.
This adds
up to over 50,000 women's lives ended by those closest to them, a scourge blamed
on deep-rooted gender inequality and damaging stereotypes of women as weaker
and less valuable members of society.
Here is an
overview of the worldwide killings of women, also called femicide.
The toll
In 2017,
some 87,000 women and girls were murdered worldwide, according to a 2018 report
of the UN Office on Drugs and Crime (UNODC).
Of these,
58 percent had their life taken by someone in their inner circle -- 30,000 by
their spouse or intimate partner, and another 20,000 by a member of their own
family.
The report
showed that men were four times more likely than women to fall victim to
homicide (they form 80 percent of all murder victims) but more often than not
died at the hands of a stranger.
Fewer than
one in five murdered men were killed by their life partner, compared to 82
percent for women.
Women in
Africa are most likely to be killed by a spouse or family member, with a rate
of nearly 70 percent (19,000 murders) compared to 38 percent (3,000 murders) in
Europe, the region with the smallest share, said the UNODC.
In absolute
numbers, Asia had the most severe toll, with 20,000 women killed by a partner
or family member in 2017.
Husbands,
fathers, brothers, mothers
The high
murder rate among women is a consequence of rampant gender-based violence.
Nearly a
third of women who have been in a relationship reported having experienced
physical or sexual violence at the hands of their partner, or a non-partner,
according to a report by the World Health Organization (WHO).
"Many
of the victims of 'femicide' are killed by their current and former partners,
but they are also killed by fathers, brothers, mothers, sisters and other
family members because of their role and status as women," said the UNODC.
These
killings, it added, do "not usually result from random or spontaneous
acts, but rather from the culmination of prior gender-based violence. Jealousy
and fear of abandonment are among the motives."
The WHO
report also blamed "unequal power of women relative to men" and the
"normative use of violence to resolve conflict".
War
Emergencies
such as poverty, war and humanitarian crises make women even more vulnerable.
Countries
topping a UN-compiled list of "intentional homicides, female" are
mostly in Latin America and Africa, regions which struggle with gang and ethnic
wars, unemployment and privation.
Topping the
list is El Salvador with 13.9 out of every 100,000 women murdered in 2017,
followed by Jamaica with 11 per 100,000 in the same year.
The Central
African Republic was in third place with 10.4 per 100,000 based on 2016
statistics, followed by South Africa with 9.1 per 100,000 in 2011.
The real
numbers are likely to be higher, with reports based on whatever data is
gathered by national statistical systems -- severely lacking in many countries
in Africa and Asia.
Many wars,
from the Democratic Republic of Congo and Burundi to Kosovo and Iraq, are known
for the tactic of targeting women, who are raped, beaten, taken as sex slaves,
and often killed, as a "weapon of war".
Family
According
to the UN, some 1,000 of the 5,000 so-called "honour killings"
reported around the world every year, are committed in India.
These are
crimes committed by close relatives after a woman or girl is deemed to have
diverted from religious or traditional mores and values -- often for falling in
love with a man from the wrong family, or for engaging in sex before marriage.
They are shot,
stoned, burned, buried alive, strangled, smothered, or stabbed to death with
what the UN describes as "horrifying regularity", often in countries
where the laws exempt the perpetrators from punishment.
Pakistan
sees hundreds of these killings every year, while in Afghanistan 243 cases were
recorded between April 2011 and August 2013.
Change
coming?
Spain is
hailed in some quarters for turning the tide in the battle against femicide
through a 2004 law against gender-targeted violence that sought to address the
problem in different spheres simultaneously -- social, educational and
correctional.
About 100
special courts and police units were also set up.
Last year,
50 women were murdered in Spain, and 51 so far this year, down from 71 in 2003.
Activists
say the number is still too high in a country where judges are accused of
bungling cases involving violence against women.
Last month,
a court caused widespread anger by convicting five men accused of gang-raping a
teenager of a lesser charge of sexual abuse on the grounds that she did not
fight back.
There are
action plans to combat violence against women in all of Canada's 10 provinces
and marital violence has fallen since 2009.
"Training
police has been one of the most beneficial factors," said Manon
Monastesse, of the federation of homes of refuge for women.
But a woman
still dies in Canada every six days at the hands of her partner, with
indigenous Canadians six times more at risk.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.