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National Tragedy: Domestic Violence Needs State Attention

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  • National Tragedy: Domestic Violence Needs State Attention

    NATIONAL TRAGEDY: DOMESTIC VIOLENCE NEEDS STATE ATTENTION


    HUMAN RIGHTS | 05.12.12 | 15:51


    By GAYANE ABRAHAMYAN
    ArmeniaNow reporter

    The scandalous case of Mariam Gevorgyan, who was tortured by her
    husband and mother-in-law, reached the court only after civil
    society's protests and demands, and finally got resolved last week
    opening a new page in the often-closed history of domestic violence in
    Armenia.

    Vayots Dzor province's general jurisdiction court sentenced Haykanush
    Mikaelyan, who repeatedly tortured her daughter-in-law for almost a
    year, to four years of imprisonment, but since her case falls under
    the amnesty related to the declaration of independence of Armenia, the
    sentence got reduced.

    Enlarge Photo
    So the mother-in-law, who burnt her daughter-in-law with an iron and a
    cigarette lighter, pierced different parts of her body with a fork and
    beat her regularly, will most likely spend only a year or less in a
    penitentiary.

    Gevorgyan, 23, believes the punishment is too mild.

    "They have disgraced my entire life, and only one year? At night I
    jump awake and remember that hell, for half a year I was forced to
    sleep standing, they wouldn't let me lie down in bed, so that even now
    at times I can't believe I am in bed... You know, when I recall it all,
    I don't even know how I have survived," Gevorgyan told ArmeniaNow,
    reflecting with horror on the ten months of "marriage in hell" she
    spent in Saint Petersburg, away from her family.

    Gevorgyan's husband, 28-year-old David Ziroyan and Haykanush
    Mikaelyan's sisters attended the trial and threatened that Mariam
    would have to pay for the slander.

    "It's all a lie. Those traces were from dermatological problems. Here,
    we have all the facts, we will prove everything," said Ziroyan.

    The husband, too, is convicted of "deliberate moderate damage to
    somebody's health", but as the maximum punishment is three years of
    imprisonment, he was pardoned during amnesty, so he will not bear any
    legal responsibility for his crime.

    Surveys show that every third woman in Armenia is subjected to
    domestic violence, however, this, as Laurence Broers, expert at
    Amnesty International, says is "the visible tip of the iceberg".

    The pan-republican survey by the UN Population Fund in 2010 revealed
    that women are still silent, despite the fact that domestic violence
    was the case with 80 percent of interviewees, however only 15 percent
    agreed to voice it.

    The mother-in-law's trial started a new stage in the fight against
    domestic violence in Armenia.

    Yet in 2006, surveys by Sociometer sociological center showed that in
    25 percent of cases of domestic violence it is implemented or
    instigated by mothers-in-law, nonetheless not a single case had been
    filed against them before.

    The mother-in-law's role was big in the 2010 case, too, when
    20-year-old Zaruhi Petrosyan was beaten to death, but only the
    husband, Yunis Sarkisov, got a 10 year sentence. This case would
    likely have been covered up, too, if not for public pressure and
    protests.

    Petrosyan's murder became a turning point in the perception of the
    issue of domestic violence in Armenia. If before law-makers and
    government members often denied the existence of such and claimed that
    "NGOs are exaggerating to get grants", the death of the young woman,
    mother of an 18 months old child, proved that the issue does exist and
    needs measures.

    While a 16-day campaign is held in Yerevan against gender
    discrimination and violence (it launched on November 25 -
    International Day for Elimination of Violence Against Women, and will
    last till December 10, International Day of Human Rights), another
    case of a husband killing his wife was completed in Vayots Dzor
    province.

    Resident of Aghavnadzor village Yurik Babayan, who killed his wife
    Anahit Babayan, got sentenced to ten years' imprisonment. Twenty seven
    years of marriage for the mother of three sons ended with a cruel
    death. According to testimony, the husband first physically abused
    her, then dragged her to the courtyard of the house, as he testified
    "not to mar up the house", and beat her to death with pieces of
    concrete and a bludgeon.

    Human and women's rights activists have a hope that these tragic cases
    will sober officials and make them finally adopt laws against domestic
    violence.

    "These are regrettable facts, which might have been possible to
    prevent, if there was a law on domestic violence obliging the state to
    create a developed network of shelters for women who have found
    themselves in such predicaments. They would be escorted to a shelter
    by special-trained police officers," says director of Women's Resource
    Centre Lara Aharonyan.

    The passing of the law on domestic violence has been postponed since
    2007, promises are voiced almost annually, but "the ice is not
    moving".

    "I believe by December 10 the complete legislative package will be
    submitted to the government, and we will solve the issues by law in
    the nearest future having the most effective levers of preventing
    tragic consequences of domestic violence," Lala Ghazaryan, head of the
    department for Family, Women and Child Affairs at the ministry of
    labour and social affairs, told ArmeniaNow.

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