Home अन्तर्राष्ट्रीय Argentina is shaken up by #NiUnaMenos…

Argentina is shaken up by #NiUnaMenos…

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The movement is challenging the abusive male dominant culture in a country where women are often catcalled, hissed at and harassed on the streets and elsewhere.

Actor Thelma Fardin recounts her abuse in 2009 by Juan Darthes, another actor. She tells how the senior actor asaulted her when she was 16 and he was 45. Thelma has attracted a lot of support from writers, politicians and journalists on social media. Her courage has encouraged several other  women to speak about the sexual abuses they suffered.
Claudia Gluebel, a congressional aide who previously worked for Senator Juan Carlos Marino could only speak about her sufferings to her family and friends till now, but has gained strength to disclose the traumatising encounter she claims she had with a colleague in Argentina’s Senate.
In that moment I just could not react,” said Guebel. She says that Pedro Fiorda, a senator’s chief of staff, grabbed her violently by the arms “like the hunter after his prey.”

She is thankful that the movement began to unearth the pain that had embedded into her like a dagger. She has also filed a complaint now, with the judicial authorities. “I thank Thelma and the group of actresses,” said 52 year-old Guebel.

Guebel is now part of a wave of women who have come forward in Argentina with sexual misconduct accusations in what has inevitably been compared to the #MeToo movement in the US and other parts of the world.

The ‘Not One Less’ movement has attracted thousands of supporters. Massive demonstrations are taking place against femicide and violence against women in Argentina, where a bill attempting to legalise abortion was defeated in August.

According to the Associated Press, there is no national registry of victims of sexual abuse in Argentina.

A survey showed that 45 percent of the 2,750 students polled at public and private universities in Buenos Aires had suffered physical or psychological abuse and nine percent had suffered sexual abuse.
The survey was published as part of a 2016 report by Unicef Argentina entitled “Sexual abuse against children and adolescents.”

Another poll conducted by the Argentine Management Society of Actors revealed that 66 percent of actresses claim to have been victims of some type of harassment or abuse at work.

In recent weeks, telephone lines that receive reports of gender violence had decreased. The largest daily increase in calls i.e. 123% was recorded on December 12, after Fardin’s news conference.

Tunez, who has helped in managing the phone lines, said she was surprised by calls made by women between 70 and 80 years of age, narrating the stories of childhood abuse.

Women associated with several youth groups and political parties have taken to social media, blogs and press outlets to report sexual aggression that they have faced.

The Senate passed a law requiring the state to provide training to public employees on gender-related topics, and the Senate women’s contingent has warned that women will no longer be silent.

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