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Wednesday, 8 February 2017
Putin approves change to law decriminalising domestic violence
Critics say amendment sends wrong message in country where one woman dies every 40 minutes from domestic abuse
Activist Alena Popova during a lone protest against the legal changes.
She said passers by told her some women deserved to be beaten.
Photograph: Vladimir Gerdo/Tass
Vladimir Putin has signed into law a controversial amendment that decriminalises domestic violence.
The amendment, which sailed through both houses of Russian parliament
before Tuesday’s presidential signing, has elicited anger from critics
who say that it sends the wrong message in a country where one woman
dies every 40 minutes from domestic abuse.
From now on, beatings of spouses or children that result in bruising
or bleeding but not broken bones are punishable by 15 days in prison or a
fine, if they do not happen more than once a year. Previously, they
carried a maximum jail sentence of two years.
Alena Popova stages a lone protest against the legal amendments in Moscow last month. Photograph: Vladimir Gerdo/Tass
Alena Popova, an activist who has campaigned against the law, said it
would be fine to pass the amendments if a draft law specifically aimed
at tackling domestic violence was passed at the same time. But that law,
which provides for restraining orders and other safeguards in domestic
abuse cases, is stalled in parliament and is not expected to be passed.
“Passing these amendments and not passing the other law is another
sign that our society refuses to take this problem seriously,” she said.
Defenders of the law say it closes a nonsensical loophole by which
violent acts committed by family members are punished more harshly than
those committed by strangers.
“The question is not whether it’s OK to hit or not. Of course it
isn’t. The question is how to punish people and what you should punish
them for,” said Olga Batalina, one of the MPs who drafted the law.
Olga Batalina said the changes merely removed a loophole
where family members were punished more harshly for attacks. Photograph:
Alexander Zemlianichenko/AP
Others claim the law is about protecting Russian traditions according
to which the family is sacred. Priest Dmitry Smirnov, head of the
Russian Orthodox Patriarchy’s commission on family matters, said on a
television programme that the idea the state should be able to poke its
nose into family affairs was a western imposition on Russia. “Some of
the things happening in northern Europe now are such that even Hitler couldn’t have dreamed them up,” he said.
Some of the mainstream discussion around gender and domestic violence in Russia can be shocking.
An article last week in the science section of the popular tabloid
Komsomolskaya Pravda cheerfully told readers about an “advantage” of
wife-beating. It said: “Recent scientific studies show the wives of
angry men have a reason to be proud of their bruises. Biologists say
that beaten-up women have a valuable advantage: they more often give
birth to boys!”
Popova said that during her one-woman protest outside parliament,
various people had insulted her. Some had claimed she was paid to
protest by western governments, while others told her that some women
simply deserved to be beaten, she said.
Discussion of the bill in parliament coincided with the women’s marches in Washington DC
and around the world in the aftermath of Donald Trump’s inauguration as
president, provoking a broader discussion about the problem of domestic
violence and the role of women in contemporary Russia.
A poster for a Moscow store offers discounts to Americans
on the day of Donald Trump’s inauguration. Photograph: Maxim
Shipenkov/EPA
In Moscow, there was no official march organised, partly due to lack
of interest, and partly because of the difficulty in gaining permission
to march from the Russian authorities. A planned demonstration against
the domestic violence amendments has been repeatedly stymied by
authorities.
Margarita
Grigoryan, a Moscow-born businesswoman who grew up in London but moved
backed recently to open a business, organised a short walk around the
Russian capital. About 15 people took part. “I was depressed that
someone so overtly misogynistic could get into the White House, and
especially being in this country, I felt I wanted to protest, but there
was nothing at all organised here,” she said.
Political analyst Maria Lipman said the situation around gender roles
in Russia was paradoxical. “The Soviet period saw gender equality from
above, so some of the rights that women in the west fought for were
granted or even imposed on Russian women,” said Lipman.
“This meant that the way gender relations developed was different,
and Russian women never had to fight for their rights. Now on the one
hand we have huge problems with unequal pay, with no women in politics,
with domestic abuse, but on the other hand there are more top [female]
editors of leading media outlets than in the United States, and there
are many top women bankers, for example.”
Nearly 300,000 people signed a petition organised by Popova to protest against the amendments, and a recent online campaign
also attempted to bring the domestic abuse problem out into the open.
Using the hashtag #Iamnotscaredtospeak, thousands of Russian women
shared their stories of sexual harassment, violence and rape on social
media. The tidal wave of terrible stories shocked many Russians, and
prompted something of a discussion. But there is a major disparity
between the attitudes of Russia’s urban middle class, and the situation
in the regions.
“There is a big constituency in Russia for whom interference in
family affairs can be portrayed as another issue in which the west is
trying to impose its views on Russia,” said Lipman.
Maria Alekhina of Pussy Riot during her trial in 2012. Photograph: Misha Japaridze/AP
Maria Alekhina, of the Pussy Riot protest group, said the legal
amendments were a red herring, and it was Russian society and attitudes
as a whole that needed to change to help alleviate the domestic abuse
situation. Alekhina spent nearly two years
in prison for carrying out a “punk prayer” in Moscow’s main cathedral
in 2012, and said between a quarter and a third of the women she met in
jail were there for attacking abusive husbands: “They were usually women
who had been beaten up for years, and there was nowhere for them to go.
We have no social help and no psychological help available. So one day
they just pick up a knife and kill their husbands.”
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