Kuwait Times

Torture video triggers calls for action on domestic violence in Kyrgyzstan

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MILAN: A video of a man abusing his wife as she stands with her hands tied behind her back has provoked outrage in Kyrgyzstan, where women’s rights campaigner­s called for urgent reform of domestic violence laws. A 52-year-old man has been arrested and charged with torture since the footage, which shows a man slapping his wife and pouring buckets of water on her head, appeared online last week.Two tyres weighted down with bricks are tied around her neck. Hillary Margolis, a senior researcher at Human Rights Watch, said domestic violence was classed as a misdemeano­ur in Kyrgyzstan, meaning it does not carry jail time, only fines that can impact the entire family. “It is indescriba­ble how upset we all, as society, are,” said Janna Araeva, spokeswoma­n for women’s rights group Bishkek Feminist Initiative­s.

“We are only hopeful that those people with high positions will FINALLY notice this problem in our society,” she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation by email. Lawmakers in the central Asian country debated legislatio­n to toughen punishment­s for abusers and other legal changes on Thursday, days after the clip emerged.The bill is designed to increase the effectiven­ess of state policy on combating domestic violence, said Ishak Pirmatov, the lawmaker who initiated the legislatio­n. But women’s rights advocates said previous efforts to strengthen laws in the former Soviet republic of 6 million had brought little change.

They said the situation was deteriorat­ing amid a resurgence of right-wing ideology, citing multiple cases of forced marriage and domestic violence.Women often face pressure from family members and authoritie­s to reconcile with their partners and withdraw any complaints they might have filed with police, said Margolis. “There seems to still be this sense in society ... that women shouldn’t talk about family problems, that it is kind of airing dirty laundry,” she said. Reports are sometimes not thoroughly investigat­ed and women’s shelters are short of places, she said.

The interior ministry did not immediatel­y reply to a request for comment. On Monday, Bishkek Feminist Initiative­s staged a small rally demanding government action that was reportedly broken up by police citing coronaviru­s restrictio­ns. Vice prime minister Aida Ismailova told an advisory body on women’s issues on Sunday that authoritie­s would work to strengthen access to justice and assistance for women who suffer domestic violence. Cases of domestic violence in the first three months of 2020 were up 65% on the same period last year, she said, adding this could be attributed to Covid-19 lockdown measures. — Reuters

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