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Armenia: New Report Exposes Sexual And Domestic Violence Against Wom

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  • Armenia: New Report Exposes Sexual And Domestic Violence Against Wom

    ARMENIA: NEW REPORT EXPOSES SEXUAL AND DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN

    Amnesty International UK
    http://www.amnesty.org.uk/news_details.asp?News ID=17945
    Nov 13 2008
    UK

    "A woman is like wool; the more you beat her, the softer she'll be'
    -Armenian saying

    A new report from Amnesty International today exposes rape, domestic
    violence and sexual harassment against women in Armenia.

    Women told Amnesty International how they were beaten by their husbands
    or other family members; how they were raped and verbally abused;
    how they were controlled and prevented from meeting their parents and
    friends. Over a quarter of women in Armenia have been hit or beaten
    by a family member and about two thirds have experienced psychological
    abuse, yet the state fails to prevent, investigate and punish violence
    against women, says the report.

    Forty-five-year old G.M. lost her sight after years of violence:
    'Anyone who felt like it could beat me. If something was wrong in
    the house, I was the one who got the blame. They pounced on me and
    beat me - all together.' Another woman, G.L. tried in vain to escape
    a violent relationship: 'Several times I wanted to walk out, but I
    have got nowhere to go. I have two young children, and if I leave he
    will not let me back. I want a divorce, but he does not.'

    Amnesty International UK Director Kate Allen said:

    'Women in Armenia suffer disproportionately from violence and abuse
    at home and at work, but this is seldom understood as a violation of
    their basic human rights.

    'A real sea-change in attitudes right across Armenia is needed -
    from the criminal justice system to the home - to ensure that women
    can live in safety and dignity.

    'Right now the preservation of the family unit comes at the expense
    of women's rights, their safety and even their lives.'

    Amnesty International's report No pride in silence: Countering violence
    in the family in Armenia, looks at individual case studies and examines
    the background to these pervasive abuses - that in Armenia, social
    attitudes among both men and women largely accept and even vindicate
    violence against women. Other hurdles include the stigmatisation of
    rape victims, reluctance by police to investigate domestic violence
    cases and a lack of shelters and support for abused women.

    The Armenian authorities are failing to provide women with options to
    leave violent relationships by not putting into place a functional
    system of either initial protection against violence in the family
    or longer term support through employment and housing.

    Amnesty is urging the Armenian authorities to combat violence against
    women in all its forms through the implementation of legislative,
    institutional and public educational strategies and more specifically
    to: - Criminalise domestic violence through the adoption of a
    specific law; - Implement a cross-agency approach including police,
    health workers, the judiciary, shelters and crisis centres and
    non-governmental organizations; - Increase the public awareness of
    violence against women as a widespread criminal offence and human
    rights violation.

    The report is part of a series of publications issued within
    Amnesty's global 'Stop Violence against Women' campaign, which was
    launched in March 2004. The campaign urges governments to comply with
    their obligation under international human rights law to counter
    discrimination against women and girls. Violence against women is
    a global phenomenon affecting in one form or another nearly one
    in three women and Amnesty has exposed violence against women in
    countries from the USA, France and Spain to Russia, Georgia, Belarus,
    Ukraine and Turkey.
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