28 July 2023

Vulnerable Women Suffer the Worst Face of Discrimination in Argentina — Global Issues

Vulnerable Women Suffer the Worst Face of Discrimination in Argentina — Global Issues

“Migration is a right,” read the handkerchiefs held by two women at a demonstration in the Argentine capital for migrants’ rights. At left is Natividad Obeso, a Peruvian who came to Buenos Aires in 1994, fleeing political violence in her country. CREDIT: Camilo Flores / ACDH
  • by Daniel Gutman (buenos aires)
  • Inter Press Service

When she came to Buenos Aires from Paraguay, she was already married and had had her legs amputated due to a spinal tumor. She suffered violence for several years until she was able to report her aggressor, got the police to remove him from her home and raised her two daughters watching after parked cars for spare change in a suburb of the capital

On the streets she met militant members of the Central de Trabajadores Argentinos (CTA), one of the central unions in this South American country, who encouraged her to join forces with other workers, to create cooperatives and to strengthen herself in labor and political terms. Since then she has come a long way and today she is the CTA’s Secretary for Disability.

“The places where women victims of gender-based violence are given assistance are not accessible to people who are in wheelchairs or are bedridden. And the shelters don’t know what to do with disabled women. Recently, a woman told me that she was sent back home with her aggressor,” Remi told IPS.

From her position in the CTA, Remi is one of the leaders of a project aimed at seeking information and empowering migrant, transgender and disabled women victims of gender violence living in different parts of Argentina, for which 300 women were interviewed, 100 from each of these groups.

The data obtained are shocking, since eight out of 10 women stated that they had experienced or are currently experiencing situations of violence or discrimination and, in the case of the transgender population, the rate reached 98 percent.

Most of the situations, they said, occurred in public spaces. Almost 85 percent said they had experienced hostility in streets, squares, public transportation and shops or other commercial facilities. And more than a quarter (26 percent) mentioned hospitals or health centers as places where violence and discrimination were common.

Another interesting finding was that men are generally the aggressors in the home or other private settings, but in public settings and institutions, women are the aggressors in similar or even higher proportions.

The study was carried out by the Citizen Association for Human Rights (ACDH), an NGO that has been working to prevent violence in Argentina since 2002, with the participation of different organizations that represent disabled, trans and migrant women’s groups in this Southern Cone country.

It forms part of a larger initiative, dubbed Wonder Women Against Violence, which has received financial support for the period 2022-2025 from the UN Trust Fund to End Violence against Women. Since 1996, this fund has supported projects in 140 countries for a total of 215 million dollars.

The initiative includes trainings aimed at providing tools for access to justice to the most vulnerable groups, which began to be offered in 2022 by different organizations to more than 1,000 women so far.

Courses have also been held for officials and staff of national, provincial and municipal governments and the judiciary, with the aim of raising awareness on how to deal with cases of gender violence.

Fewer complaints

“Argentina has made great progress in recent years in terms of laws and public policies on violence against women, but despite this, one woman dies every day from femicide (gender-based murders),” ADCH president María José Lubertino told IPS.

“In this case, we decided to work with forgotten women. We were struck by the fact that there were very few migrant, trans and disabled women in the public registers of gender-violence complaints. We discovered that they do not suffer less violence, but that they report it less,” she added.

Lubertino, a lawyer who has chaired the governmental National Institute against Discrimination, Xenophobia and Racism (INADI), argues that these are systematically oppressed and discriminated groups that, in her experience, face their own fears when it comes to reporting cases: “migrants are afraid of reprisals, trans women assume that no one will believe them and disabled women often want to protect their privacy.”

Indeed, the research showed that 70 percent of trans, migrant and disabled women who suffered violence or discrimination did not file a complaint.

Many spoke of wanting to avoid the feeling of “wasting their time,” as they felt that the complaint would not have any consequences.

Each group faces its own particular hurdles. Migrant women experience discrimination especially in hospitals. Transgender people, in addition to suffering the most aggression (sometimes by the police), suffer specifically from the fact that their chosen identity and name are not recognized. Disabled women say they are excluded from the labor market.

More than three million foreigners live in this country of 46 million people, according to last November’s data from the National Population Directorate. Almost 90 percent of them are from other South American countries, and more than half come from Paraguay and Bolivia. Peru is the third most common country of origin, accounting for about 10 percent.

Of the total number of immigrants, 1,568,350 are female and 1,465,430 are male.

As for people with disabilities, the official registry included more than 1.5 million people by 2022, although it is estimated that there are many more.

Since 2012, a Gender Identity Law recognizes the legal right to change gender identity in Argentina and by April 2022, 12,665 identification documents had been issued based on the individual’s self-perceived identity. Of these, 62 percent identified as female, 35 percent as male and three percent as non-binary.

Different forms of violence

Yuli Almirón has no mobility in her left leg as a result of polio. She is president of the Argentine Polio-Post Polio Association (APPA), which brings together some 800 polio survivors. Yuli is one of the leaders of the trainings.

“Through the trainings, those of us who participated found out about many things,” she told IPS. “We heard, for example, about many cases related to situations of power imbalances. Women with disabilities sometimes suffer violence at the hands of their caregivers.”

The most surprising aspect, however, has to do with the restrictions on access to public policies to help victims of gender-based violence.

The Ministry of Women, Gender and Diversity runs the Acompañar Program, which aims to strengthen the economic independence of women and LGBTI+ women in situations of gender-based violence.

The women are provided the equivalent of one monthly minimum wage for six months, but anyone who receives a disability allowance is excluded.

“We didn’t know those were the rules. It’s a terrible injustice, because disabled victims of violence are the ones who most need to cut economic dependency in order to get out,” said Almirón.

Another of the project’s partner organizations is the Human Rights Civil Association of United Migrant and Refugee Women in Argentina (AMUMRA). Its founder is Natividad Obeso, a Peruvian woman who fled the violence in her country in 1994, during the civil war with the Shining Path guerrilla organization.

“Back then Argentina had no rights-based immigration policy. There was a lot of xenophobia. I was stopped by the police for no reason, when I was going into a supermarket, and they made me clean the whole police station before releasing me,” she said.

Natividad says that public hospitals are one of the main places where migrant women suffer discrimination. “When a migrant woman goes to give birth they always leave her for last,” she said.
“Migrant women suffer all kinds of violence. If they file a complaint, they are stigmatized. That’s why they don’t know how to defend themselves. Even the organizations themselves exclude us. That is why it is essential to support them,” she stressed.

© Inter Press Service (2023) — All Rights ReservedOriginal source: Inter Press Service

, 2023-07-28 08:58:58, #Vulnerable #Women #Suffer #Worst #Face #Discrimination #Argentina #Global #Issues,

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24 July 2023

Woman dead after grizzly bear encounter near Yellowstone National Park

Woman dead after grizzly bear encounter near Yellowstone National Park

A woman was found dead in Montana on Saturday after coming into contact with a grizzly bear on a trail west of Yellowstone National Park.

The Montana Department of Fish, Wildlife and Parks said in a statement on Sunday that the woman was found deceased on a trail near West Yellowstone, a Montana town nestled in the Custer Gallatin National Forest just west of Yellowstone National Park.

They said the woman was found deceased “following an apparent bear encounter” based on what investigators determined were grizzly bear tracks at the scene. The department said the investigation into the grizzly attack was ongoing.

Rangers issued an emergency closure of the area where the woman was found, which is popular with hikers.

WATCH | Tips for avoiding a bear attack: 

Tips for avoiding a bear attack

Although the department’s statement said the death appeared to have followed the woman’s interaction with the bear, it did not confirm her cause of death.

The attack comes amid a rise in Montana’s grizzly bear population and an increase in sightings.

The department put out a news release last week warning visitors that staff had confirmed grizzly bear sightings throughout the state, “particularly in areas between the Northern Continental Divide and the Great Yellowstone ecosystems.”

They implored those camping and visiting parks to carry bear spray, store their food while outside and tend to their garbage.

, 2023-07-24 19:05:13, #Woman #dead #grizzly #bear #encounter #Yellowstone #National #Park,

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20 July 2023

Wagner mercenaries face tough UK sanctions as they ‘target civilians’ in African nation | World | News

Wagner mercenaries face tough UK sanctions as they ‘target civilians’ in African nation | World | News

The UK Foreign, Commonwealth and Development Office has updated its Sanctions List adding four people connected to the Russian mercenary Wagner Group‘s activities in the Central African Republic.

Alexander Alexandrovich Ivanov, Aleksandr Grigorievitch Maloletko, Vitalii Viktorovitch Perfilev and Dimitri Sytii, were all named by the Foreign Office as “persons associated with the Wagner Group”.

Perfilev is the head of the Wagner in the Central African Republic, while Pikalov is the Wagner Commander in Africa.

The move comes after the head of Britain’s MI6 agency, Sir Richard Moore, accused Russia of using Wagner as a tool of imperialism in Africa, offering leaders in the Central African Republic, Mali and other countries a “Faustian pact” of protection in return for handing over mineral wealth to Russia.

Speaking in Prague on Wednesday (July 19), Sir Richard said the government of President Vladimir Putin was beset by “venality, infighting and callous incompetence” and the mutiny by Wagner Group mercenary leader Yevgeny Prigozhin had “exposed the inexorable decay of the unstable autocracy over which Putin presides.”

He said Putin was “under pressure” after the brief rebellion and the “humiliating” deal he struck with the help of Belarus to end it. The Kremlin says Prigozhin attended a military meeting in Moscow with Putin after the mutiny.

“He really didn’t fight back against Prigozhin. He cut a deal to save his skin,” Moore told the audience.

“Prigozhin started off as a traitor at breakfast, he had been pardoned by supper, and then two days later he was invited for tea,” Moore said.

“So there are some things that even the chief of MI6 finds a little bit difficult to interpret, in terms of who’s in and who’s out.”

, 2023-07-20 15:14:00, #Wagner #mercenaries #face #tough #sanctions #target #civilians #African #nation #World #News,

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16 July 2023

US tsunami warning issued after 7.2 magnitude earthquake in Alaska Peninsula region | US News

US tsunami warning issued after 7.2 magnitude earthquake in Alaska Peninsula region | US News

A tsunami warning has been issued after an earthquake in the Alaska Peninsula region, the United States Geological Survey (USGS) has said.

The US Tsunami Warning System issued the threat for nearby regions after the earthquake, which struck early on Sunday.

A warning alerts the public that widespread flooding is imminent, expected or occurring as a result of a tsunami. Flooding may also continue for hours after its arrival.

The “notable quake” was initially read at a 7.4 magnitude, but this was revised to 7.2 by the USGS.

This is still defined as “strong” on the survey’s scale.

The initial depth of 9.3km (5.78 miles) was also revised to 32.6 km (20.3 miles) a short time later.

The geological survey said that little to no population was exposed to the quake.

And at around 10am BST the alert was cancelled.

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The Alaska Earthquake Centre said the event was felt widely throughout the Aleutian Islands – an area furthest from the mainland – the Alaskan Peninsula, and Cook Inlet regions.

The tsunami warning was changed to an advisory – which specifies that strong currents or dangerous waves are expected, imminent or occurring – just after 9am GMT.

The Alaskan Peninsula extends 885km (550 miles) into the Pacific Ocean and earthquakes are relatively common in the area.

The USGS recorded a 5.2 magnitude earthquake around three minutes after the 7.2 quake, in the same area on Sunday morning.

A further 3.5 magnitude quake was recorded in the peninsula at 8.30am GMT.

Despite the frequency of earthquakes, only those measured above a magnitude of four or five tend to cause damage, according to the USGS.

, 2023-07-16 12:30:00, #tsunami #warning #issued #magnitude #earthquake #Alaska #Peninsula #region #News,

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12 July 2023

France weather warning to Brit tourists as deadly 45C Cerberus heatwave and severe thunderstorms hit Europe

France weather warning to Brit tourists as deadly 45C Cerberus heatwave and severe thunderstorms hit Europe

BRITISH tourists heading to France have been warned as the deadly heatwave dubbed “Cerberus” passes through Europe sending temperatures soaring and storms raging.

The mercury in holiday hotspots across Europe could reach 45C while France is bracing for severe thunderstorms this week.

Temperatures in France are set to soar to 40C as heatwave Cerberus passes through Europe

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Temperatures in France are set to soar to 40C as heatwave Cerberus passes through EuropeCredit: AFP
France has been battered by thunderstorms

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France has been battered by thunderstormsCredit: Rex
The highest temperatures are expected in the southeast of France and Corsica

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The highest temperatures are expected in the southeast of France and CorsicaCredit: Meteofrance

Forecaster Météo France predicts temperatures are set to rise up to 40C across the country on Thursday with red weather alerts being in place in eastern and southern France.

A yellow weather warning is in place in the east of the country in several regions including Marseille while an orange warning is in force in Nice.

The mercury has risen to 40C on the island of Corsica while 38C was recorded in the Rhône Valley in the southeast.

The high temperatures are followed by thunderstorms and strong winds as multiple regions across the country were issued with tier-three orange alert weather warnings.

Desperate search for boy, 2, who vanished while playing in garden on holiday
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Weather experts have declared 2023 an El Niño year – a natural phenomenon that occurs cyclically and causes fluctuations in the global climate.

The highest temperature ever recorded in France was 45.9C in 2019 – another El Niño year.

The UN’s World Meteorological Organization said it will raise temperatures around the world, and the effect is likely to continue for the rest of the year.

In some areas in the east, the warning was raised to the red alert level, which means there is a risk of a storm causing trees to fall, floods, or damage in buildings, according to Météo France.

Locals were urged not to travel unless necessary and seek shelter indoors.

French cities including Lyon, Strasbourg, and Nancy announced the temporary closure of public parks.

Scorching temperatures have been recorded across Europe thanks to the deadly heatwave Cerberus coming from Sahara.

The anticyclone has already caused sweltering weather in Europe with temperatures reaching record highs.

Holidaymakers in the Mediterranean have been urged to take precautions as Spain is set to have 42C while temperatures in Greece will reach 45C.

Spain’s meteorological agency AEMET issued a “Level 1 heat alert” as the mercury is set to rise in popular resorts such as Benidorm and the islands of Majorca, Menorca, and Ibiza.

The first heatwave of this summer in Greece is expected to last ten days reaching an average of 42C to 43C across the country.

, 2023-07-12 19:06:00, #France #weather #warning #Brit #tourists #deadly #45C #Cerberus #heatwave #severe #thunderstorms #hit #Europe,

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08 July 2023

Peru's special jail for ex-leaders is all full up

Peru's special jail for ex-leaders is all full up

In Peru, so many ex-presidents have been accused of crimes that the country has designated a small prison specifically to house them. It’s a symbol of corruption, but also of political dysfunction.

, 2023-07-08 17:39:21, #Peru039s #special #jail #exleaders #full,

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04 July 2023

President Macky Sall rules out third-term re-election bid spelling relief for tense Senegal

President Macky Sall rules out third-term re-election bid spelling relief for tense Senegal

President Macky Sall’s decision not to seek a third term as Senegal’s head of state has thrown open the country’s presidential election, ending widespread speculation over his political future that helped fuel deadly protests last month. 

Rumours that Macky Sall would try to extend his more than a decade-long rule have stoked unrest in the West African country, shaking its reputation as a bastion of stability in an otherwise turbulent region. 

Prior to the president’s speech, top opposition leader Ousmane Sonko had called for fresh demonstrations if Sall were to announce a re-election bid in February of next year. 

The 61-year-old leader had previously remained coy about his ambitions, stoking tensions over whether he would use a constitutional revision to bypass the country’s two-term limit. 

In a speech carried live on his official Facebook page on Monday, he maintained that Senegal’s constitution would have allowed his candidacy despite having already been elected to a second term in 2019. 

“Even if I have the right, I felt that my duty is not to contribute to destroying what I have built for this country,” the president said as he ruled out running for a third term – to the dismay of his most ardent supporters.  

Sall asked his government to everything possible to organise a transparent election in February 2024. He offered no indication of who might step into his shoes and carry the party’s colours in the upcoming campaign. 

“I know that this decision will come as a surprise to all those who have a friendship with me,” he added. “Senegal is more than just me, it’s full of people capable of taking Senegal to the next level.” 

‘Break with the past’ 

Sall’s momentous decision bucks the continent’s trend of entrenched strongmen leaders using constitutional changes as an excuse to reset their mandate and extend their hold on power. It was praised by neighbouring leaders, the African Union and former colonial power France, whose foreign ministry hailed it as “proof” of the solidity of Senegalese democracy.

The president’s surprise move comes 11 years after he defeated his predecessor and former mentor Abdoulaye Wade, whose own decision to seek a controversial third term in office had sparked violent street protests.  


First elected in April 2012, Sall rose to power promising a radical “break with the past”, focused on social justice, structural reforms and development projects. 

Flagship reforms included the introduction of the bourse familiale, a family allowance paid to some 300,000 low-income people that was recently increased amid an inflation crisis triggered by the war in Ukraine. 

Sall oversaw a series of major infrastructure projects, including a new airport and town built on the outskirts of Dakar, as well as highways, express trains, a national stadium and a road link to neighbouring Mali. 

The country’s economy has grown steadily during his time in office, with annual GDP surging from $17 billion to $27 billion over the past ten years, though unemployment has remained stubbornly high at over 22%, affecting young people in particular. 

Meanwhile, Sall won plaudits for his proactive diplomacy on the international stage, championing the cancellation of African debt, the strengthening of the fight against terrorism and the rejection of military coups in a region rattled by a spate of army putsches.

As head of the African Union last year, he spearheaded efforts to broker the Black Sea grain deal that has allowed critical shipments of Ukrainian grain to reach African countries despite the Russian invasion.  

He also enjoyed success in bringing calm to Senegal’s separatist-troubled southern region of Casamance, and played a key part in forcing out dictator Yahya Jammeh in neighbouring Gambia in 2017. 

‘It’s a relief’ 

Midway through his first term in office, Sall pushed through a reform of the constitution that reduced Senegal’s seven-year presidential terms to just five years.  

While the new text upheld a two-term limit on presidential mandates, Sall’s supporters soon argued that his first term under the old constitution should not be counted – setting the stage for the bitter dispute that has festered in recent months. 

As recently as this past weekend, Sall was heard saying that the country’s Constitutional Council would allow for his candidacy, fuelling speculation he would announce his third-term bid. 

Sonko, Sall’s chief opponent, had called for the president to bow out of the 2024 election publicly, accusing the government of bringing court cases against the opposition in an effort to sideline the competition. 

The tension boiled over last month over a court case in which Sonko was sentenced to two years in prison after being convicted of corrupting youth in a sentence that could jeopardise his election hopes next year. The government said at least 16 people died in the unrest, while the opposition put the figure at 19. 

Sall’s critics have long accused the president of drifting towards authoritarian rule by jailing or exiling his opponents. In recent months, rights monitors including Amnesty International and Reporters Without Borders had warned of a “restrictions of liberties” in the West African nation.

“The question of Sall’s possible third term only added to the climate of uncertainty that has gripped Senegal,” said Alioune Tine, founder of Afrikajom Center, a local think-human rights watchdog.

“Article 27 of the Constitution couldn’t be any clearer, stating that ‘no-one can serve more than two consecutive terms’, whereas Macky Sall argued the contrary,” Tine added. “It’s a relief that he has ultimately changed his mind.”

This article was translated from the original in French.

, 2023-07-04 18:16:17, #President #Macky #Sall #rules #thirdterm #reelection #bid #spelling #relief #tense #Senegal,

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