Women's Human Rights
- Violence Against Women
- Domestic Violence as Torture
- Sexual Violence
- Rape as a Tool of War
- Female Genital Mutilation
- Domestic Violence in LGBT Communities
- Domestic Violence as Torture
End Domestic Violence. End Torture
- The United Nations Convention Against Torture defines torture as "an act by which severe pain or suffering, whether physical or mental, is intentionally inflicted on a person", for a purpose such as obtaining information or a confession, punishment, intimidation, or coercion, "or for any reason based on discrimination of any kind".
- The Inter-American Convention to Prevent and Punish Torture defines torture includes as torture "the use of methods upon a person intended to obliterate the personality of the victim or to diminish [her] physical or mental capacities, even if they do not cause physical or mental anguish".
- The National Coalition Against Domestic Violence defines domestic violence as a pattern of behavior used to establish power and control over another person through fear and intimidation, often including the threat or use of violence, when one person believes they are entitled to control another.
In the past, violence against women, particularly violence occurring in the home or between intimate partners, was viewed as a private matter, not as an issue of civil or political rights. Now however, by applying these legally accepted definitions of torture to the violence that women face everyday around the world, the international community has explicitly recognized violence against women as a human rights violation involving state responsibility
- In 1993 the United Nations issued the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against Women. The Declaration states that, "States should exercise due diligence to prevent, investigate, and in accordance with national legislation, punish acts of violence against women, whether those acts are perpetrated by the State or private persons". It sets forth ways in which governments should act to prevent violence, and to protect and defend women's rights. These measures form the standard of due diligence that states are obligated to live up to.
- The legal concept of due diligence describes the minimum acceptable level of effort which a state must undertake to fulfill its responsibility to protect individuals from abuses of their rights. Due diligence includes taking effective steps to prevent abuses, to investigate them when they do occur, to prosecute the alleged perpetrator and bring him to justice in fair proceedings, and to ensure adequate reparation, including compensation and redress. It also means ensuring that justice is upheld without discrimination of any kind. In various measures of this standard, in many countries of the world, states are failing in their due diligence and failing to protect women from violence
- The failure of a government to prohibit acts of violence against women, or to establish adequate legal protections against such acts, constitutes a failure of state protection. Acts of violence against women constitute torture when they are of the nature and severity envisaged by the concept of torture and the state has failed to provide effective protection.
Violence in the home is a global epidemic. Without exception, women's greatest risk of violence is from someone she knows. Domestic violence is a violation of a woman's rights to physical integrity, to liberty, and all too often, to her right to life, itself. And when a government fails to provide effective protection from such abuse, domestic violence is torture
- Domestic violence takes many
forms. From acid burning, dowry-related violence and
"honor" killings to rape, battery, and psychological
abuse, women are subjected to the basest forms of abuse
and humiliation. Such torture of women in rooted in
a global culture which denies women equal rights with
men, and which legitimizes the violent appropriation of
women's bodies for individual gratification or political
ends. Violence against women is compounded by discrimination
on the grounds of race, ethnicity, sexual orientation,
social status, class, and age and by social and cultural
norms that deny women equality also renders women more
vulnerable to abuse. The common thread is discrimination
against women, the denial of basic human rights to individuals
simply because they are women. The Universal Declaration
of Human Rights affirms the inadmissibility of discrimination
and proclaims that everyone is entitled to all the rights
and freedoms set forth in the declaration, without distinction
of any kind, including distinction based on sex.
- States have a duty under international law to take positive measures to prohibit and prevent torture and to respond to instances of torture, regardless of where it takes place or whether the perpetrator is an agent of the state or a private individual. When states fail to take the basic steps needed to protect women from domestic violence or allow these crimes to be committed with impunity, states are failing in their obligation to protect women from torture.
Amnesty International considers domestic violence
torture; torture for which the state is accountable
when such acts are of the nature envisioned by the international
standards of torture and when the state has failed to fulfill
its obligation to provide women effective protection.
