|
|
 |
Recommendation 1450 (2000)[1]
Violence against women in Europe
-
The Assembly deplores the great
increase in the number of women subjected to violence in Council of Europe
member states. Every day in Europe one woman in five is a victim of violence.
-
Hundreds of thousands of women thus
face physical and mental violence at home or outside, violence which is
sometimes inflicted by the public authorities or by coercive institutions.
Oppression of women as manifested in domestic violence, rape and sexual
mutilation is a reality known, and denounced, in many countries.
-
The Assembly reaffirms the support
it gave to the Beijing Platform for Action adopted at the 1995 United Nations
Conference on Women, when the different forms of violation of women?s rights
were clearly defined and forthrightly condemned.
-
The Assembly notes that although
domestic violence is one of the commonest forms of violence against women, it
remains the least visible. And yet it is estimated that more women in Europe die
or are seriously injured every year through domestic violence than through
cancer or road accidents. The costs, in terms of human and other resources, are
as great to the medical and health services as they are to employers, the courts
and the police.
-
The Assembly accordingly condemns
violence against women as being a general violation of their rights as human
beings - the right to life, safety, dignity and physical and psychological
well-being.
-
It utterly deplores that in some
member countries there are still murders committed allegedly to preserve honour,
forced marriages and other forms of sacrifice, and it underlines the urgency of
taking action to punish all criminal acts committed in the name of tradition or
religion.
-
The Assembly condemns with equal
strength genital mutilation, still too often practised in the name of custom or
cultural and religious tradition, which amounts to barbaric torture inflicted on
young women. It therefore invites member states to implement the measures
proposed in Recommendation 1371 (1998).
-
It likewise condemns the growing
scale of prostitution and traffic in women in Council of Europe member states,
brought about by international networks whose activities have made this one of
the largest areas of organised crime.
-
The Assembly recognises the
important role played by non-governmental organisations (NGOs) in the defence of
women?s rights and in the stand taken against violence towards women in its
various forms. It invites member states to fully support such NGOs in their
national and international activities.
-
The Assembly therefore recommends
that the Committee of Ministers:
-
draw up a European programme to
combat violence against women, with the aim of:
-
harmonising law and
procedure so as to establish a proper system of European positive law;
-
bringing in legislation
outlawing all forms of domestic violence;
-
establishing legal
recognition of marital rape and making it a criminal offence;
-
ensuring greater
protection for women, for example by means of orders restraining violent
husbands from entering the marital home and measures to properly enforce
penalties and sentences;
-
ensuring greater
flexibility as regards both access to justice and the availability of various
procedures, with provision for ex officio action by the
authorities, in camera hearings and court benches made up equally of
female and male judges;
-
draw up a European charter of
domestic work;
-
invite member states to:
-
ratify, if they have not
yet done so, and implement the United Nations Convention on the Elimination of
All Forms of Discrimination against Women and its protocol;
-
step up the role of the
European Union Observatory on Violence against Women;
-
implement the
measures advocated in Recommendation 1325
(1997) on trafficking in women
and forced prostitution in Council of Europe member states and speedily make
substantial funding available for programmes of support and assistance to
victims of traffic in human beings;
-
step up international
co-operation between state institutions and NGOs in order to improve
protection for the victims of trafficking in women, something which requires, inter alia,
increased awareness-raising and training for those in primary contact with
potential victims of trafficking in women;
-
introduce training
programmes for police officers and judges dealing with women victims of
violence;
-
encourage recruitment of
female police officers;
-
set up centres for
women victims of violence;
-
run information and
awareness-raising campaigns to educate the public about the unacceptability of
violence towards women and set up preventive initiatives to promote equal
relations.
[1]
Assembly debate
on 3 April 2000 (9th Sitting) (see Doc. 8667, report of the Committee on Equal
Opportunities for Women and Men, rapporteur: Mrs Vermot-Mangold).
Text adopted by the Assembly on
3 April 2000 (9th Sitting).
|
 |
|