The Jerusalem Post

Women rally against domestic violence: Today we have made history

- • By EYTAN HALON

Tens of thousands of demonstrat­ors from across Israel gathered at Tel Aviv’s Rabin Square on Tuesday evening to demand funding to implement an emergency program to combat domestic violence against women.

“Today we have made history,” campaign organizers Stav Arnon, Ruty Klein and Dror Sadot told the vocal crowd.

“We woke up this morning to a day when women set the agenda. This is proof for us and for those in positions of authority that 50.7% of the population can lift an entire country on its feet. It is impossible to ignore us anymore.”

The three women, backed by dozens of women’s groups, issued the unpreceden­ted

call for women to strike last week following the murders of two teenage girls, Sylvana Tsegai, 13, and Yara Ayoub, 16, raising the death toll of beaten women to 24 this year and 192 in the last decade.

A NIS 250 million emergency program to combat domestic abuse was approved by the government in June 2017 but has yet to receive funding.

The initiative includes a public rehabilita­tion program for victims of domestic violence; a rehabilita­tion program for attackers; education and public awareness efforts; and a comprehens­ive policy change in the Israel Police’s approach to domestic violence.

“This is not a women’s struggle but rather a struggle for men and women who want a sane society,” activist Vered Ovadia told the rally. “I call on every man to stand with us in this struggle. You all have daughters, mothers, sisters, friends and partners. Raise your voices clearly against those men who raise their hands against women.”

More than 300 public bodies and private sector businesses backed the organizers’ call to protest, with many enabling female members of staff to join the day-long strike without affecting their pay.

Earlier in the day, hundreds of male and female demonstrat­ors blocked Tel Aviv’s Azrieli Junction and the western entrance to Jerusalem, bringing traffic to a standstill.

Across the country, many opting to work wore black clothes and answered the call of protest organizers to exit their offices at 10 a.m. for 24 minutes of silence in memory of this year’s victims. Flights from Ben-Gurion Airport were delayed as Israel Airports Authority staff staged a midday protest.

In her role as chairwoman of the Knesset’s Transparen­cy Committee, Zionist Union MK Stav Shaffir convened a meeting to examine the failure to finance the emergency program to combat domestic violence.

A Finance Ministry representa­tive told the meeting that it had not participat­ed in the inter-ministry committee tasked with fighting domestic violence.

“We did not participat­e in the committee,” said the representa­tive. “The government’s decision was not budgetary, rather only a matter of principles. Since the government’s decision was not budgetary, there was no designated budget for its implementa­tion.”

“This is social terror,” said Shaffir. “It is inconceiva­ble that those standing at the forefront of this struggle are required to beg for a budget while members of the coalition receive budgets for political purposes and small interests. Aid centers are collapsing without budgets, and the government is ignoring the murder of women,” she said. •

 ?? (Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) ?? PROTESTERS BLOCK the entrance to Jerusalem at the Strings Bridge yesterday as they call to end domestic violence, following the murders of two young women in the past week.
(Marc Israel Sellem/The Jerusalem Post) PROTESTERS BLOCK the entrance to Jerusalem at the Strings Bridge yesterday as they call to end domestic violence, following the murders of two young women in the past week.

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