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Portugal's 'Domestic Violence Day' marks 500 needless deaths

justiceMarch 7th is a day of mourning against domestic violence in Portugal with government buildings flying flags at half-mast.

In the first two months of this year, 11 women have died as a result of assault by men in a domestic setting, against 12 being murdered in the 12 months of 2017.

This Jan-Feb figure is the highest number in ten years with the Minister of the Presidency, Mariana Vieira da Silva, stating that in the past 15 years, 500 women in Portugal have died as a result of domestic violence.

Protesters claim anger at the number of court rulings that clearly are sexist and want government action against lenient sentences.

Vieira da Silva declared March 7th as the day of national mourning for victims of domestic violence, “This day is a day in which we should not just remember the victims but show support to their families and collectively renew our sense of purpose towards addressing this battle. People in the country have been culturally conditioned, discouraged to comment or offer support to victims."

A 2014 European Institute for Gender Equality report, found that 24% of women in Portugal have experienced violence.

Women on Portugal’s islands are at highest risk with Madeira and the Azores taking first and second place in the domestic violence chart of shame, according to Ministry of Internal Affairs figures.

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Comments  

+3 #3 Boris H 2019-03-10 08:38
Nothing new in the responses of #1 and #2, its full steam ahead with there usual anti-Portugal rethoric.
I often wonder, what is there agenda ... maybe they are just negative about everything, it looks that way.
-2 #2 Jeff Brown 2019-03-08 17:34
Obviously no use at all to the EU in attempting to standardise on its laws but every Portuguese Tribunal will have stories of the more weird judgements and the judge that did them. Knowing a judge has a particular bend such as a woman or foreigner hater allows a home run for the lawyers as its a form of 'no win - no fee' (actually illegal in Portugal) that they can charge extra for.Getting back to back judges with the same bend, the second to hear the appeal, must be the Legal equivalent of Portuguese Nirvana. Is this part of the reason for all the delays over the years - as judges get rotated, waiting for the right judge to be in the right place?
So is the Portuguese Government waiting to get a fossil fuels enthusiast judge - with a 'secret' portfolio of fossil fuels shares in family members names (not his / hers, of course!) - in place to hear the 'oil exploration' offshore Algarve cases ? Non Portuguese would call this gaining of an unfair advantage - corruption ....
-2 #1 Elsa 2019-03-08 08:49
What as always is jaw dropping is the complacency of the authorities and indeed friends, family and neighbours. How often do we learn, after a death or serious assault, that the woman had previously complained to those nearest her and, quite often, to the Police yet been told just to 'Man Up. This is Portugal'. Added to which, yet another massive millstone on Portugal's attempted evolution, is that the assaulting partner (usually male) can sue for Defamation. So the Portuguese State and Judiciary wades in as we have seen in recent court cases and, to help his case, the man can imagine up mates to confirm it is all In her imagination. Self inflicted by the woman - attention seeking.

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