Violence and Women: what remains unseen
Violence is referred to as any behaviour of any individual intended to
hurt, damage, or kill someone or something using the strength of emotion or an
unpleasant or destructive natural force. The United Nations general Assembly defines
“violence against women” as “any act of gender-based violence that results
in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual or mental harm or suffering to women, including threats of
such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in public or in private life.”
We have always been concentrating on rape issues but apart from this,
domestic violence, mob violence, state violence or war violence, violence in
empowerment systems, eve teasing, bride burning, acid attack, forced marriage,
sex trafficking, forced prostitution etc, all these come under violence against
women. The unseen and the most ironic fact in all the above stated violence is
that the man who is bound to protect his wife against any evil gives way to
domestic violence, the mob, especially the youths which comes out to the streets
against women violence are the cause of mob violence. The state as a whole or
our soldiers who are the protectors of the equal rights of our women, inflicts
this pain on our women during wars. Rape has been used as a psychological weapon
of war by some of the insane soldiers in past and is being used at present. Violence
against women is widespread in both developed and developing countries.
Physical abuse is common in all parts of the world. No matter how hard we try
to protect abused women by passing laws, it is still the single most common
cause of injury to women. Physical abuse occurs more often than muggings, motor
vehicle accidents, and work place injuries combined. It occurs once every nine
seconds and in two-thirds of marriages. Many women are in abusive situations
that they cannot get away from because of fear, or just because they think that
they provoke the abuser to abuse them. Most women are abused by their husbands.
Battering husbands are described as angry, moody, easily provoked, tense, and
resentful. This individual is likely to be angry with himself or someone in
some way. He seems very nice and polite in public, but when he arrives home he
can turn into a completely different person. A battering husband may be losing
his grip on his job or his prospects and may feel compelled to prove that he is
at least the master of his home and beating his wife is one way for him to
appear a winner.
To stop violence against women being acceptable in society, we need to
stop it being accepted in our political system. Public outrage over widespread
sexual violence against women and children is growing, but only if we step up
the pressure on our political leaders will they act. There’s so much that
needs to be done to protect women and end rape impunity, and we should start
at the very top, by cleaning out politicians who have been perpetrators in the
war against women and bringing them to justice. Every minute these
men remain in power, is another minute where rape is accepted and the nation's
reputation is tarnished. This is not the India anyone wants.
Almost all of our politicians condemn rape but what they fail to say is that people in their own parties face charges of rape and sexual assault. A crime against women is reported every two minutes somewhere in India, and three quarters of rape cases end with no convictions. To get to the root of the problem, we must combine changes to the legal system so that more cases are convicted, and also build public awareness to help break the attitudes that justify rape in the first place. From opposing the stoning of women in Iran, to supporting the reproductive rights of women in Morocco, Uzbekistan and Honduras, to lobbying for real action to counter the growing 'rape trade' in trafficked women and girls, our community as a whole must come on the front lines of the fight to end the war on women.
Let's make change unstoppable. Let us come together and stand in solidarity with a brave, young activist like Malala, who has shown the world how one little school girl can stand up to armed and dangerous extremists. Days ago, 16 year-old Amina Filali, raped, beaten and forced to wed her rapist, killed herself -- the only way she saw to escape the trap set for her by her rapist and the law. If we act now, we can stop this unspeakable tragedy from happening to anyone else. Let’s stand together for victims like Amina Filali and the legacy of hope that her story must leave. A progressive society is defined by the way it treats women. Let us come up to a single platform to make our world a better place for our brave women. Let us use our collective power to join with people around the globe to fight for a better world.
Almost all of our politicians condemn rape but what they fail to say is that people in their own parties face charges of rape and sexual assault. A crime against women is reported every two minutes somewhere in India, and three quarters of rape cases end with no convictions. To get to the root of the problem, we must combine changes to the legal system so that more cases are convicted, and also build public awareness to help break the attitudes that justify rape in the first place. From opposing the stoning of women in Iran, to supporting the reproductive rights of women in Morocco, Uzbekistan and Honduras, to lobbying for real action to counter the growing 'rape trade' in trafficked women and girls, our community as a whole must come on the front lines of the fight to end the war on women.
Let's make change unstoppable. Let us come together and stand in solidarity with a brave, young activist like Malala, who has shown the world how one little school girl can stand up to armed and dangerous extremists. Days ago, 16 year-old Amina Filali, raped, beaten and forced to wed her rapist, killed herself -- the only way she saw to escape the trap set for her by her rapist and the law. If we act now, we can stop this unspeakable tragedy from happening to anyone else. Let’s stand together for victims like Amina Filali and the legacy of hope that her story must leave. A progressive society is defined by the way it treats women. Let us come up to a single platform to make our world a better place for our brave women. Let us use our collective power to join with people around the globe to fight for a better world.