Cape Times

End violence against women and children

- MISHKA DARIES Head of Media and Communicat­ions, MJC

THE Muslim Judicial Council

(SA) held a successful awareness programme on gender-based violence at their offices on Tuesday.

Violence against women and children is an internatio­nal phenomenon, but in the Western Cape it has reached pandemic proportion­s. “Raising awareness, mobilising, educating and empowering our masses about this pandemic is the responsibi­lity of every faith community,” MJC women’s forum chairperso­n Mualima Khadija Patel-Allie said.

“We cannot remain silent, portray apathy, stand by and be complacent as the aggression perpetrate­d against our sisters and children intensifie­s and escalates. This atrocity is threatenin­g the existence of healthy functionin­g societies in South Africa.” A recent report by the Medical Research Council found that 40% of men assault their partners daily and that three women in South Africa are killed every day by their intimate partners.

“We can only address GBV in society when we choose to identify and acknowledg­e the enormous impact it has on communitie­s,” MJC head of social developmen­t Shaykh Faadhil Emandien said.

“More than 80% of marriage cases we deal with at the MJC is some form of abuse. We must understand how critically GBV threatens the existence of a healthy functional society in South Africa.”

“We encourage society to acknowledg­e that violence against women and children, is not a government problem or a criminal justice problem alone,” said Mualima Patel-Allie.

“GBV is a societal problem which stems from poverty, lack of education and unemployme­nt. But to eradicate this scourge, the solution lies with us.”

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa