Toronto Star

Killings of women, girls rise in 2021

- JASON MILLER CRIME REPORTER

New statistics show more women and girls have been killed in Canada in the first half of this year than the same period in the two previous years, an increase a University of Guelph researcher warns is a telltale sign the compoundin­g pressures of the pandemic have exposed women to greater risk of violence.

Months of fluctuatin­g lockdowns and stay-at-home orders have left women, many of whom were already facing violence from abusers, exposed to more deadly attacks, according to new data released by University of Guelph professor Myrna Dawson and her team at the Canadian Femicide Observator­y for Justice and Accountabi­lity.

“What is happening is that the situation is becoming more stressful and that is making previously violent men more violent, and women who have for probably years figured out how to negotiate that violence now don’t have access to the resources or the ability to exit,” Dawson said.

According to the Femicide Observator­y, 92 women and girls were killed in the first six months of 2021, 14 more killings than over the same period last year and 32 more than in 2019.

“This is a trend that we need to become more concerned about,” Dawson said. “This is just the tip of the iceberg. There are thousands that are still living with violence.”

The surge in femicides — the gender and sex-related killings of women and girls — shows a correlatio­n with a lack of access to services and shelters as well as tense home conditions amid the pandemic, said Dawson, a gender-based violence expert and director of Guelph’s Centre for the Study of Social and Legal Response to Violence.

Dawson said we need to start paying more attention to finding points of interventi­on and emphasized that there has been a glaring lack of a safety net for women seeking refuge.

“We need to make people more aware of the risk factors involved in these killings,” she said, adding there is a gap in training required for profession­als, including law enforcemen­t and judges, to understand these crimes, so they can respond more effectivel­y.

Intimate partners, predominan­tly male, made up 37 per cent of the persons accused in the 2021 killings while another 15 per cent were categorize­d as

family members and 39 per cent were unspecifie­d, according to the Femicide Observator­y report. Of the 79 cases where the gender of the accused was known, 73 were men.

Dawson said there were several examples in which the accused also attacked the female victims’ children and other family members present.

Ontario was home to 33 of the reported deaths, followed by British Columbia and Quebec, tied at 17 deaths each.

The methods of attack are wide-ranging, but Dawson said, “most often we see that firearms and stabbings are often neck-and-neck as the two most common.”

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