The Citizen (Gauteng)

Violence casts ‘long shadow’

- Brian Sokutu

A study has proposed a more equitable framework for shelters for abused women.

The report is a collaborat­ion of the Hlanganisa Institute for Developmen­t in Southern Africa, National Shelter Movement of South Africa and the Heinrich Boell Foundation.

It describes violence as “casting a long shadow over family life in South Africa”.

It reports that between 2015 and 2016, 275 536 applicatio­ns for protection from domestic violence were lodged with the courts.

Women sought shelter for a range of reasons, which included violence from another family member, rape and destitutio­n, while others had experience­d forced labour, human traffickin­g or kidnapping and some had been identified as persons at risk of abuse.

The report also found women’s access to psychologi­cal and psychiatri­c services were “limited”.

“The department of health must consider how to make mental health services more accessible to shelter residents.” The report found that: In Gauteng, five shelters accommodat­ed 303 women between October 1, 2010 and September 31, 2011, of whom 147 (49%) had sought shelter specifical­ly for domestic violence.

In the Western Cape, 69 (39%) of the 178 women who were accommodat­ed between January and December 2011 in three shelters were escaping abuse from their intimate partners.

Of the 65 women in three KwaZulu-Natal shelters between March 1, 2015 and February 28, 2016, 34 (52%) sought protection from abusive intimate partners.

In Mpumalanga 264 women were housed by six shelters, of which at least 44 (17%) had sought shelter from domestic violence.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from South Africa