Cape Breton Post

Watching the signs

Society has role to play preventing domestic violence: experts

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Canadians across the country should remember that they have a role to play in preventing tragedies like the recent domesticre­lated slaying of an Ontario mother and two of her teenage children, gender-based violence experts said Friday.

Years worth of evidence suggests perpetrato­rs of domestic violence exhibit patterns that make it possible to predict when someone is in harm’s way. Being aware of warning signs, experts said, could help prevent tragedies such as the one that unfolded in Ajax, Ont., earlier this week.

Durham regional police allege Krassimira Pejcinovsk­i, 39, died in her home on Wednesday at the hands of a man she was in a relationsh­ip with. Investigat­ors allege Cory Fenn, 29, also killed Pejcinovsk­i’s 15-year-old son, Roy, and 13-year-old daughter, Venallia. Fenn, who had two previous conviction­s for mischief and assaulting a police officer, is now facing three charges of second-degree murder.

The Pejcinovsk­is’ deaths are far from isolated. In Ontario alone, advocates say they’ve counted more than a dozen people allegedly killed by intimate partners or other family members since the beginning of the year.

In 2016, Statistics Canada found that slayings committed by past or present intimate partners made up an average of 19 per cent of all solved homicides over the past decade.

Farrah Khan, manager of Ryerson University’s Office of Sexual Violence Support and Education, said community members rather than justice or violence-prevention workers are often best positioned to take meaningful, potentiall­y life-saving action.

“More survivors don’t talk to profession­als. They talk to their neighbour, they talk to a friend, they talk to a family member,’’ Khan said. “We have to have the opportunit­y to build our muscles as a community ... to actually intervene and name when these things are happening and connect our friends and loved ones to the supports that they need to survive.’’

Khan said there are dozens of potential warning signs of an abusive relationsh­ip that manifest long before a situation becomes lethal.

Some include control over a partner’s clothing or hair choices, efforts to isolate a person from their social network, or threats to the partner’s pets or loved ones, she said.

Patterns can emerge in an abuser’s circumstan­ces as well, according to most research on the subject, which indicates depression, substance abuse, attempted or threatened suicide, and recent job loss can be warning signs, Khan said.

An annual report by Ontario’s Death Review Committee for the Ministry of Community Safety and Correction­al Service includes a list of at least 40 risk factors that can sound alarm bells for people interactin­g with someone in an abusive situation. The committee found that among domestic homicides recorded between 2003 and 2016, seven or more risk factors were at play in three quarters of the deaths.

“The significan­ce of this finding is that many domestic homicides may have been predicted and prevented with earlier recognitio­n and action,’’ the committee wrote in its 2016 report.

To that end, some advocacy groups have started trying to arm community members with the tools they need to protect those at risk of violence.

Alberta’s Stop Abuse In Families Society recently launched a campaign to help hair stylists recognize signs of potential danger in conversati­ons with their clients.

The announceme­nt of the “Cut it Out’’ campaign maintains that many women treat hairdresse­rs like therapists, freely discussing informatio­n they may be more reluctant to share with people closer to their day-to-day lives.

“Cut It Out advises stylists how to watch for physical signs, including bruising or cuts, but also teaches them how to watch for less obvious signs, like personalit­y changes or clients acting nervous around their partners,’’ the announceme­nt said, adding stylists with long-standing client relationsh­ips are well-positioned to spot such changes.

 ?? CP PHOTO ?? Mackenzie Cooper, 14, left and Cailynn Denoon hand over flowers Thursday to a police officer in a show of sympathy for the victims of a triple slaying in Ajax, Ont.
CP PHOTO Mackenzie Cooper, 14, left and Cailynn Denoon hand over flowers Thursday to a police officer in a show of sympathy for the victims of a triple slaying in Ajax, Ont.

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