BBC News, Sebastian
Usher, 28 August 2013
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| A Twitter campaign to criminalise domestic violence was launched in Saudi Arabia earlier this year |
The new law
sets penalties for all forms of physical and sexual abuse, both at home and in
the workplace.
These
include penalties of up to a year in prison and fines of up to $13,000. The law
will also provide shelter for victims of domestic abuse.
Rights
activists have welcomed the move but also questioned the effectiveness of the
implementation of the law.
In legal
terms, violence against women and children in the home has been a private
matter in Saudi Arabia until now.
'Positive
step'
A women's
rights activist told the BBC that the new law was a positive and long overdue
step, but it needed to be fully implemented.
Suad Abu
Dayyeh from the rights group Equality Now said the police and courts that would
administer the law needed training programmes to adjust to it. She added that
male guardianship - which still dominates relations between the sexes in Saudi
Arabia - was likely to remain a major obstacle in enforcing the law.
Violence
within the home against women and children used not to be discussed openly in
Saudi society, but that has been changing recently.
A striking
public information campaign against domestic abuse was launched earlier this
year, featuring an image of a veiled woman with only her eyes visible - one
clearly blackened. Underneath it said: "Some things can't be
covered up."
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