DEMONSTRATIONS TAKING PLACE TO OPEN 16 DAYS OF ACTION AGAINST FEMICIDE, RAPE AND
OTHER VIOLENCE TOWARDS WOMEN AND GIRLS
~ Cristina Sykes, Mateo Sgambati ~
The international day against patriarchial violence is being marked today (25
November), with numerous actions and demonstrations having already taken place
over the weekend.
From Asia through Europe to the Americas, demonstrations will continue today and
into the next 16 days, culminating on International Human Rights Day. In the UK,
a large Reclaim the Night march is being organised in Brighton on Friday 29
November.
Violence against women and girls remains one of the most prevalent and pervasive
human rights violations in the world. According to the United Nations, almost
one in three women globally have been subjected to physical and/or sexual
violence at least once in their life. In 2023, at least 51,100 women were
murdered by partners and family members. This means a woman was killed every 10
minutes.
“When I go out, I want to be free, not brave”; demonstration in France, 23
November. Photo: Kurdistan au feminin
In France, demonstrations are set to take place in Paris, Grenoble and
Strasbourg, among other locations. “Our struggles do not stop at the borders
imposed by nation states”, stated the call-out for the Strasbourg demo, “the
anti-patriarchal struggle is international and cannot be dissociated from the
struggles against all forms of racism, fascism, imperialism and colonialism”.
In Madrid, the workers of the Gender Violence Network of the city council and
regional authority will go on a 24-hour strike, highlighting insufficient
funding and the outsourcing of practically all the network’s resources to
external companies who compete for providing them at the lowest price. This
contributes to “precarious services and a general deterioration in the working
conditions of the workers and in the quality of the care directed to women,
their daughters and sons, and their environment”, said the workers.
Poster for Madrid demonstration, endorsed by trade unions including CGT and CNT.
In Mexico, feminist collectives and organisations including the madres
buscadoras are highlighting the need to reclaim the autonomy and independence of
the feminist movement from the state’s agenda. “Women are the most vulnerable to
the escalation of femicidal violence, disappearances, trafficking, forced
displacement, impoverishment, labor inequality, the devastation of natural
resources and militarization”, said the groups in a declaration, ahead of
today’s mass rally in Mexico City.
The day was designated in 1981, during the First Latin American and Caribbean
Feminist Encounter. It commemorates the murder on 25 November, 1960 of the three
Mirabal sisters—María Teresa, Minerva and Patricia—who opposed Trujillo’s
dictatorial regime in the Dominican Republic. It was officially adopted by the
United Nations in 2000.
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