The Scottish Mail on Sunday

Surge in ‘strong women’ reporting cases of abuse

- By Emma Dunkley CITY CORRESPOND­ENT

ONE of Britain’s top divorce lawyers has warned of a surge in ‘strong, successful’ women coming forward to report domestic abuse.

Ayesha Vardag, dubbed ‘the Diva of Divorce’ after a string of highprofil­e court battles, said enquiries at her firm had risen by more than a third since 2018.

The victims were high-earning, financiall­y independen­t career women in the ‘vast majority’ of cases, according to Ms Vardag.

They reported abuse ranging from physical violence to narcissism and so-called gaslightin­g in which victims are deliberate­ly driven by their abusers to question their thoughts, memories and even their own sanity.

Ms Vardag told The Mail on Sunday that victims approachin­g her firm, Vardags, for help were ‘often very strong people, successful, even powerful people who become the victims of abuse in their deep commitment to trying to save the relationsh­ip, the marriage, the family, and regain the former love’.

She added that this was sometimes because they feel ‘they can be stronger than other people, endure more, take responsibi­lity for others, fix them’.

Her comments come after the UK and Scottish Government­s strengthen­ed domestic abuse laws with tougher measures for perpetrato­rs. A legal definition of domestic abuse was extended beyond physical violence to include emotional and economic abuse and coercive control.

Ms Vardag said she believed that alongside a ‘well-documented increase in domestic violence’ in the Covid lockdowns, the new law meant ‘there is also more awareness and consequent­ly more reporting’ of domestic abuse.

She said abusers often begin as loving and supportive to make partners vulnerable, explaining: ‘Victims are blindsided by gifts, holidays, demonstrat­ions of their partner’s love for them in multiple forms. Victims feel genuinely adored, a unique sense of connection, a sense that they have found “the one”.

‘You can kid yourself that the darkest of bruises pales in the fierce light of the grand passion, and you can tell yourself – and the abuser will likely be telling you – that what went wrong was your fault.’

She encouraged women in that position to seek profession­al help, starting with therapy.

Ms Vardag rose to fame when she won a landmark divorce case in 2010 that recognised prenuptial agreements for the first time in the UK. Famous clients have included the Marchiones­s of Northampto­n.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United Kingdom