Friday, January 1, 2016

Cuba needs law against gender violence, activists say

Cuba needs law against gender violence, activists say
CARIBBEAN360 DECEMBER 31, 2015
LUIS BAÑOS/IPS)
By Patricia Grogg

HAVANA, Cuba, Thursday December 31, IPS – Activists and researchers
dedicated to the study of gender violence in Cuba insist on the need for
a comprehensive law to protect the victims and prevent the problem,
which was publicly ignored until only a few years ago in this socialist
Caribbean island nation.

Legislation is necessary "because even when the ideal in our society is
justice and equality, there are social expressions of violence against
women that have been kept invisible, which contributes to the impunity
enjoyed by the abusers," psychologist Valia Solís told IPS.

Solis, with the non-governmental Christian Centre for Reflection and
Dialogue – Cuba (CCRD), based in Cárdenas in the western province of
Matanzas, added that the law should not be limited to providing for
prison terms, because violence requires a preventive approach in order
to keep the behavior and its consequences from getting worse.

Several articles of the Cuban constitution, the penal code and other
legislation refer to gender equality. But there are no specific laws
aimed at fighting sexist violence, or adequate instruments to protect
the victims.

People who face gender-related mistreatment are "in a state of
vulnerability, and a law could attenuate this," said Aida Torralbas, a
professor and researcher at the university of the eastern province of
Holguín, who said the phenomenon is largely unnoticed and surrounded by
impunity.

In her view, although a punitive response is not the best option,
because it addresses the problem after the act, it is important because
it recognizes gender violence as something that must be punished and
that hurts the integrity of another person. Torralbas concurs with other
academics that education is an essential factor in combating the problem.

"That's why a law of this kind must also take into account the
possibility of educating society in non-patriarchal and non-sexist
values that modify ways of thinking and acting," she said. The expert
also argued that it is important to strengthen training of judicial
system and law enforcement personnel with respect to how to deal with
these issues.

"It's a fact that the police themselves do not know how to handle these
questions," Mercedes Abreu, a social worker with the Integral
Neighbourhood Transformation Workshop (TTIB) of Pogolotti, in the Havana
district of Marianao, told IPS.

The TTIBs were created in 1988 to carry out social work in poor
neighbourhoods in the capital, and are under municipal government
administration.

"Women themselves often do not know that they're the victims of violence
in the family, in the workplace, in the community. Ignorance leads us to
turn a blind eye to this problem," said Abreu, who also said the Cuban
population "has very little legal awareness."

The TTIBs and civil society organizations have helped pull out of the
closet a reality that is the product of Cuba's patriarchal culture,
which runs counter to the progress made towards equality such as equal
wages for men and women, the massive incorporation of girls and women in
education and the labour market, and free, universal access to abortion
on demand.

For example, since 2007, the "Oscar Arnulfo Romero" Centre for
Reflection and Solidarity (OAR) and other groups have been organizing an
annual National Day for Non-Violence Against Women, to coincide with the
16 days of global activism between November 25 and December 10.

Without underestimating the impact achieved by this activism, Abreu
believes the question of violence must be addressed continually from
different angles. "We can't just focus on it during the week of activism
against violence. Progress can't be made this way," said the social
worker, who has worked for several years in a low-income neighbourhood.

In her view, the efforts must involve families, schools, the family
doctor, social workers, the Federation of Cuban Women, decision-makers,
the media, churches, activists, lawyers, judges and the police.

Elaine Saralegui, a theologian and pastor of the Metropolitan Church in
Cuba, in the western province of Matanzas, told IPS that "violence has
to do with the established order and with the relations between people
or groups in unequal positions of power."

She said laws were needed to protect and promote free expression of
gender identity. "When we talk about gender, people generally think
about men and women, and we tend to ignore other expressions of gender
that don't fit in the heteronormative mindset," she said.

She said the country needs "laws that can offer legal protection across
the board, explicitly, where each one of the faces of the people hurt by
heteronormativity, patriarchal sexism and gender violence are taken into
consideration."

"So we're talking about heterosexual women, but also about people with
different sexual orientations and gender identities," she said.

In 2012, the first National Conference of the governing Communist Party
of Cuba (PCC) included the rejection of gender and domestic violence in
its objectives, in what was seen as an important official recognition of
the issue.

The PCC is organizing its seventh congress for April 2016, with an
agenda that includes assessment of compliance with the agreements
reached at the party's sixth congress and First National Conference. The
last congress, in 2011, approved a programme of reforms to update the
country's socialist model of development.

Next year, the governmental Women's Studies Centre and the National
Statistics and Information Office plan to carry out a national survey on
gender equality, although it is not clear whether gender violence will
be included in the questions.

According to the Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean
(ECLAC), 20 countries in Latin America and the Caribbean now have laws
against gender violence, although only eight have earmarked specific
funds in the national budget.

Meanwhile, 14 countries have created a separate criminal classification
for femicide – gender-motivated murders – and two have established that
it is homicide aggravated by gender hostility in their legislation.

Source: Cuba needs law against gender violence, activists say |
Caribbean360 - http://www.caribbean360.com/news/1129185

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