Arab Times

Violence, extortion against women continue unabated in spite of law

‘Need to act, implement legislatio­n on rights’

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Minister of Public Works, Minister of Electricit­y, Water and Renewable Energy Amani Bougammaz discussed on Tuesday with a number of friendly states’ ambassador­s companies’ participat­ion in road ventures.

Minister Bougammaz said in a statement after the meeting that it was held in line with guidelines by His Highness the Prime Minister Sheikh Ahmad Nawaf Al-Ahmad Al-Jaber Al-Sabah who urged for sparing no effort for maintainin­g the roads and enhancing their safety.

She indicated that a number of companies had been picked up for entering tenders for maintainin­g the roads and streets, noting her desire to employ new technologi­es for renovating the roads

The minister affirmed that the companies to be qualified must have sufficient expertise and a record of quality works as well as ability to train Kuwaiti engineers.

The meeting grouped the ambassador­s of South Korea, France, Japan, China, Turkey, the charge d’affaires of the US and Germany. (KUNA)

KUWAIT CITY, March 8: March 8th is the day when the world pays attention to the achievemen­ts and initiative­s of women, empower them, protects their rights and all forms of violence, discrimina­tion and extortion, and proposing laws to protect their basic rights of all kinds, reports Al-Qabas daily.

Kuwaiti women, along with their counterpar­ts around the world, celebrate this day as official local statistics indicate an increase in the frequency of crimes committed against women in the country in the recent period, in which the lives of many victims were claimed, while the security services recorded, in the past year, about 1,500 cases of violence and extorting against female victims.

Activists, lawyers and social workers, spoke at length on the extent that the country’s women have achieved in order to protect their social, economic and political rights and preserve their physical and moral integrity.

They said that it is also difficult to deny Kuwait’s progress in the field of protecting women, with the issuance of the Law on Protection from Domestic Violence, but they called the law “lame, walking on one foot, as long as its executive regulation­s have not yet been issued.”

They demanded the need to speed up the issuance of the relevant executive regulation­s, to ensure the integratio­n of the applicatio­n of the aforementi­oned law and stressed on the importance of activating the role of the Center for Shelter for Abused Women.

Counselor and lawyer, Azraa Al-Rifai, praised the issuance of the Domestic Violence Law, and said that the situation of battered women after its issuance “has become more positive, from a legal point of view, but our ambition is still greater than that,” calling for “activating the role of judicial enforcemen­t in domestic violence cases.”

The social activist Asrar Hayat, enumerated different forms of violence against women in society, and talked about “another form” of violence practiced against her, but not much light is shed on it, which is “electronic violence.”

Hayat said that this type of violence, which is termed as “cyberbully­ing,” has increased in frequency with the steady increase in the use of social media, indicating that its risks may lead its victims to depression, isolation, and even suicide.

Violation

Head of the Supreme Council for Community Rights at the Lawyers Associatio­n, Attorney Mona Al-Arbash said the “domestic violence” law is good but lamented the lack of executive regulation and called for ways to educate society about the dangers of domestic violence, stressing the importance of accelerati­ng the issuance of the executive regulation­s of the Domestic Violence Law.

Six urgent demands to prevent violation against women include expediting the issuance of the executive regulation­s of the Domestic Violence Law; husbands and brothers not use the law as a pretext to plunder women; increasing shelters for battered women and opening new ones for men; Drafting a law that limits ‘cyberbully­ing’ to which women are exposed; activating the role of the judicial police in cases of domestic violence and training female workers in the field of abused women to deal with their cases

Census results out: According to the final results of the 2021 census project for the State of Kuwait, the total population is 4,385,717, of whom 1,488,716 are Kuwaitis (34 percent), and 2,897,001 are non-Kuwaitis (66 percent), reports Aljarida daily.

On Tuesday, the results of the census were announced by the Central Statistica­l Bureau with the cooperatio­n of the Public Authority for Civil Informatio­n (PACI).

The results showed that the number of Kuwaiti males is 729,638 (49 percent), and the number of Kuwaiti women is 759,078 (51 percent). The number of non-Kuwaiti males is 1,941,628 (67 percent) and the number of non-Kuwaiti females is 955,373 (33 percent).

The results also revealed that the number of residency violators is 151,992. The number of entry visa holders is 44,879, and the number of visa violators is 26,985.

Minister of Commerce and Industry and the Minister of State for Communicat­ions and Informatio­n Technology Mazen Al-Nahedh stated that the importance of statistics is due to its major role in the developmen­t planning process.

He stressed that such data forms the backbone for any developmen­t planning, as there is no developmen­t without planning or planning without statistics.

 ?? KUNA photo ?? Minister of Public Works, Minister of Electricit­y, Water and Renewable Energy Amani Bougammaz talking to the foreign countries ambassador­s.
KUNA photo Minister of Public Works, Minister of Electricit­y, Water and Renewable Energy Amani Bougammaz talking to the foreign countries ambassador­s.

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