Mittwoch, November 21, 2007

Destruktive Maßnahmen gegen häusliche Gewalt internationales Problem

Auf der Website von Wendy McElroy und ihren liberalen Feministinnen führt Carey Roberts aus, inwiefern die einseitige Propaganda im Zusammenhang mit häuslicher Gewalt und deren Folgen ein weltweites Problem darstellen. Ein Auszug:

Remember Colleen Nester? She was the forlorn New Mexico woman who claimed she was being harassed by TV talk show host David Letterman, who was allegedly beaming mental telepathic messages and using televised facial gestures. Under New Mexico law, harassment is a form of domestic violence, so Ms. Nester was granted a restraining order.

Yes, really.

(…) Earlier this year Mexican lawmakers passed a new domestic violence law that allows authorities to issue emergency protective orders. Now a conviction of being jealous or sexually indifferent can land a hapless man in jail.

In Costa Rica, an American expatriate was recently put behind bars when he told his girlfriend's son to stop painting satanic symbols on the wall. One police officer noted, "Women in Costa Rica are taking advantage of this new law. They throw out their boyfriend and then steal their things and leave."

(…) In Israel, the Knesset recently appointed a committee to probe the extent of false claims of domestic violence. Last month Dr. Orli Iness of the University of Haifa revealed, "there have been reports that in some precincts the figure is as high as 50%."

A 1999 survey of judicial magistrates in Australia concluded that "almost 90% believe domestic violence orders were used by applicants - often on the advice of a solicitor - as a tactic in family court proceedings to deprive their partners of access to their children."

Libertarian Casandra Hewitt-Reid of New Zealand describes her country's Domestic Violence Act in these terms: "it is possible for a perfectly innocent man, who has done nothing outside the law, to be sent to prison on one person's unsubstantiated word."

In Germany, Michael Bock, criminology professor at the University of Mainz, reveals that the so-called Force Law (Gewaltschutzgesetz) "gives an effective tool to the hands of mothers who want to separate children from their fathers. ... It is not meant to start a constructive dialog between the parties, but to expropriate, disempower, lock out, and punish men."

Last year Maria Sanahuja, chief justice in Barcelona, Spain issued a scathing commentary on her country's Gender Violence Law. Sanahuja rebuked the law as representing a "repugnant violation of fundamental rights" that has caused "enormous pain to tens of thousands of men." Sanahuja's acid opinion concludes, "The massive detention of men for scarcely any reason is a characteristic of totalitarian countries."

In India the situation has reached crisis proportions. Section 498a of the Cruelty Against Women Law has lead to widespread arrests of husbands with no evidence of wrong-doing. Because the law states the man's relatives are likely accessories to the crime, many thousands of brothers, sisters, and elderly parents have also been wrongly imprisoned. In 2005 the Indian Supreme Court labeled the egregious abuses of Section 498a to be an "assassin's weapon" and a form of "legal terrorism." (…)

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