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Introduction:
India reported double the usual number of domestic abuse cases in the first week of nationwide movement restrictions, according to the country’s National Commission for Women.
Early signs are that SARS-CoV-2 poses a greater direct health risk to men, and particularly older men.
But the pandemic is exposing and exploiting inequalities of all kinds, including gender inequality.
In the long term, its impact on women’s health, rights and freedoms could harm us all.
Women are already suffering the deadly impact of lockdowns and quarantines.
These restrictions are essential, but they increase the risk of violence towards women trapped with abusive partners.
Increase in domestic violence all over the world:
According to UN Women, globally 243 million women and girls aged 15-49 have been subjected to sexual and/or physical violence perpetrated by an intimate partner in the previous 12 month.
The number is likely to increase as security, health and money worries heighten tensions and strains are accentuated by cramped and confined living conditions.
It says according to emerging data, violence against women and girls, particularly domestic violence, has ‘intensified’.
The unfair and unequal treatment of working women:
There is evidence that in situations of crisis or calamity there is an increase in violence against women.
There is a lot of anxiety in people’s minds, uncertainty whether they will find a job, whether there will be pay cuts, there are hardships such as in accessing food. In a patriarchal society like ours, men find women easy targets for venting their anger.
Way Forward:
Helplines, psychosocial support and online counselling should be boosted, using technology-based solutions such as SMS, online tools and networks to expand social support, and to reach women with no access to phones or Internet.
Police and justice services must mobilise to ensure that incidents of violence against women and girls are given high priority with no impunity for perpetrators.
We need women at the table when decisions are taken on this pandemic, to prevent worst-case scenarios like a second spike in infections, labour shortages, and even social unrest.
Women in insecure jobs urgently need basic social protections, from health insurance to paid sick leave, childcare, income protection and unemployment benefits.
Looking ahead, measures to stimulate the economy, like cash transfers, credits, loans and bailouts, must be targeted at women – whether they are working full-time in the formal economy, as part-time or seasonal workers in the informal economy, or as entrepreneurs and business owners.
Conclusion:
The COVID-19 pandemic has made it clearer than ever that women’s unpaid domestic labour is subsidising both public services and private profits.
This work must be included in economic metrics and decision-making. We will all gain from working arrangements that recognise people’s caring responsibilities, and from inclusive economic models that value work at home.
This pandemic is not only challenging global health systems, but our commitment to equality and human dignity.
With women’s interests and rights front and centre, we can get through this pandemic faster, and build more equal and resilient communities and societies that benefit everyone.
By: Priyank Kishore ProfileResourcesReport error
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