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ROOT CAUSES OF VIOLENCE
AGAINST WOMEN IN SWEDEN REMAIN: UN EXPERT
June 22, 2006 – (UN News Service) Describing
the “gender equality experience” in Sweden as being
a “contradictory process,” a United Nations rights expert
has said that the root causes of violence against women in the country
have remain unchallenged and become normalized despite an impressive
amount of legislation aimed at stamping out the problem. Yakin Ertürk,
the Special Rapporteur of the UN Human Rights Council on violence
against women, its causes and consequences, made her remarks after
returning from a fact-finding mission to Sweden, where she held
meetings with officials, women’s groups and others, and talked
with women who have suffered extreme violence.
“The gender equality experience in Sweden
has been a contradictory process. While the equal opportunity agenda
has paved the way for public representation of women, it was not
effective in countering the deeply rooted patriarchal gender norms
that sustain unequal power relations between women and men,”
she said in a press statement. “As a result, the root causes
of violence against women remained unchallenged and perceived as
pertaining to the private realm of life. In the quest for equality,
violence against women is said to have become normalized and personalized.”
In particular, Ms. Ertürk highlighted a 2001
survey, commissioned by the Government, which found that 46 per
cent of all women have experienced male violence since their fifteenth
birthday, while 12 per cent had been subjected to such violence
in the last year prior to the survey. “The study also highlights
that those men who perpetrate violence against women can be found
at all income and education levels. Contrary to common stereotypes,
they are “normal”, more often than not, Swedish-born
men. Similarly, women who suffer gender-based violence can be found
in all segments of society.” Describing the “legislative
and institutional response” of the authorities to violence
against women as “impressive,” she said that despite
this, only about 10 per cent of all reported crimes of sexual violence
result in a prosecution of the perpetrator.
Ways of improving this situation, she suggested,
include specific training of police, medical and other personnel,
and also more proactive methods of investigation. While emphasizing
that “violence against women remains a mainstream problem
in Sweden,” the Special Rapporteur said that some groups appear
to face higher risks, including for example women from immigrant
communities and he called for special protection and assistance
for such groups from both the State and society at large. “In
this regard, it is important to recall that cultural, traditional
or religious considerations can never be invoked to justify any
form of violence against women,” said the expert, who is unpaid
and works in an independent, personal capacity.
From: http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=18960&Cr=sweden&Cr1=
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