The Sunday Post (Inverness)

MOTHERS. DAUGHTERS. SISTERS. VICTIMS

Nine Scottish women killed by their partners or exes in just one year

- By Krissy Storrar

The terrible toll of domestic violence in Scotland can be exposed today after nine women lost their lives to partners or exes in just 12 months.

The mothers, daughters and sisters behind the dreadful statistic can be revealed as the mum of one victim said her death could and should have been avoided as experts warned cuts to lifeline services were placing vulnerable women in danger.

Nine women died at the hands of their partners or expartners in 2018/ 19. The men accused of killing two of the women have still to stand trial but seven others have either been convicted, been sent into psychiatri­c care, or taken their own lives.

Marsha Scott, chief executive of Scottish Women’s Aid, said a decade of cuts to frontline support services has put more women at risk.

She said: “The long- term solution is to change the way we fund local services because the existing model isn’t fit for purpose. We have to stop the bonfire of local services.”

Urgent action to reverse funding cuts to frontline services must be reversed to save the lives of women threatened by violent partners, experts warned yesterday.

Support agencies and campaign groups spoke out after nine Scots women lost their lives to partners or exes in just 12 months.

Over the last decade, 74 Scots women have died in domestic killings. Most were stabbed to death.

Scottish Women’s Aid ( SWA) described cuts to the funding of frontline support services for women leaving abusive relationsh­ips as a “bonfire”.

Up to 70% of services have had their funding cut, making it harder for victims to get help. Campaigner­s say multi- agency domestic homicide reviews – which are already conducted in England and Wales – should be carried out after each killing to help identify early warning signs.

New legislatio­n was introduced in Scotland in April to criminalis­e psychologi­cal abuse as well as domestic violence. But campaigner­s say police offices and other specialist workers need better awareness of this type of abuse – called coercive control – and improved risk assessment techniques because it is often a precursor to potentiall­y lethal violence.

SWA chief executive Marsha Scott said the austerity policies of the last decade had hit the very services which help women under threat.

She said: “It’s that support that helps women go to the police, that helps them connect to appropriat­e legal advice when it’s available, and that helps them make a plan for whether they can stay safely at home.

“Our services were much better funded 10 years ago.

“The long- term solution is to change the way we fund local services because the existing model isn’t fit for purpose.

“We have to stop the bonfire of local services.”

One frontline support worker, who did not want to be named, said options open to many women seeking refuge from violent partners have reduced because of spending cuts, adding: “Services that were there 10 years ago, might not be there now. Women don’t know where to go or who to turn to. It should not be this way. How many more must die?”

Rachel Adamson, co- director of Zero Tolerance, a char i ty campaignin­g to end men’s violence against women, said: “The number of domestic killings in Scotland is appalling but not surprising.

“Men abuse, attack, and kill their partners because society lets them. We excuse the behaviour of men and we don’t believe women when they ask for help. The only way to prevent violence against women is to end gender inequality for good.”

One of the UK’S leading experts on domestic homicides called for society as a whole to recognise controllin­g behaviour as the biggest predictor of domestic homicide. Criminolog­ist Dr Jane Monckton Smith, a former police officer, said: “This is an epidemic. It’s a public

health crisis. It’s the biggest cause of traumatic death for women across the world.

“We’re not talking about a couple of murders here and there, we’re talking about a very big problem,” she added.

“Women are getting killed behind closed doors day after day after day. “There will be another couple in the UK next week, we just don’t know their names yet.

“We’ve got to do something about this, it’s just gone on too long.

“Where is the anger? Why isn’t the whole of Scotland standing up and saying what is going on?” Dr Monckton Smith studied 372 homicides – including Scottish cases – and identified an eight-stage timeline of offenders’ behaviour patterns in the run- up to killing their partner or ex-partner.

Controllin­g behaviour rather than violence was the biggest red flag for homicides, coupled with a woman’s decision to end the relationsh­ip. Her research, published in the summer, is now used to train police officers across the country. Dr

Monckton Smith said: “Coercive control is an umbrella and everything below it is methods used to exert control – financial abuse, violence, gaslightin­g, sexual abuse. “Those people who are controllin­g are the most likely to go on and kill a partner or former partner. It’s terrifying.”

Police Scotland says it has already trained 11,000 officers and staff, including call handlers who are likely to be a desperate victim’s first point of contact.

On average, it takes 34 domestic incidents before a victim makes a report to police.

They receive a report every nine minutes and in 2017/ 18 the force recorded 59,541 incidents of domestic abuse.

Detective Superinten­dent Debbie Forrester, Scotland’s lead officer for domestic abuse, said: “We know that under-reporting is a huge issue with gender- based violence and domestic abuse.

“Part of the new legislatio­n is trying to get victims and others to understand that it’s the psychologi­cal and emotional and financial abuse not just physical violence,” she added.

“It’s an escalation of those behaviours that can also lead to a domestic homicide not just an escalation of physical violence.”

Det Supt Forrester said it was essential that when a victim finally tells the police they’re being abused, officers take appropriat­e action. “That might be the only opportunit­y you get to prevent further abuse and escalation of that abuse, which could be domestic homicide,” she said.

“We would always say the simple things which are really listen to the person, validate what they’re saying, believe them and understand what the behaviours are then help them or give more informatio­n about the help they can get.”

The experts call for more focused action came as organisati­ons and businesses around the world join in 16 Days of Action, a campaign to raise public awareness and encourage employers do more against domestic violence.

Reporting team: Krissy Storrar, Craig Mcdonald, Russell Blackstock and Janet Boyle

 ??  ?? THE VICTIMS Anti-clockwise from top right: Lynn Forde, Jennifer Morgan, Alexis Flynn, Sheena Jackson, Joanne Gallacher, Marie Walker, and Jeanna Maher. Two other women were allegedly killed by partners or exes in the last year but court proceeding­s mean they cannot be identified
THE VICTIMS Anti-clockwise from top right: Lynn Forde, Jennifer Morgan, Alexis Flynn, Sheena Jackson, Joanne Gallacher, Marie Walker, and Jeanna Maher. Two other women were allegedly killed by partners or exes in the last year but court proceeding­s mean they cannot be identified
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 ??  ?? Joanne Gallacher aged 13 as a pupil at St Andrew’s School in East Kilbride
Joanne Gallacher aged 13 as a pupil at St Andrew’s School in East Kilbride

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