4.3 • 2.6K Ratings
🗓️ 21 November 2019
⏱️ 27 minutes
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Domestic abuse in Russia is endemic with thousands of women dying at the hands of their partners every year. Despite this a controversial law was passed in 2017, which scrapped prison sentences for first-time abusers. Beatings that do not cause broken bones or concussion are now treated as administrative offences rather than crimes. As one activist puts it: “the punishment for beating your wife now feels like paying a parking ticket.”
But Russian society is waking up to the crisis. The case of three girls - the Khachaturyan sisters - who face long prison sentences for murdering their tyrannical father, has sparked mass protests. More than 300,000 people have signed an online petition urging prosecutors to drop the murder charges. The girls’ mother tells reporter Lucy Ash that her daughters were acting in self-defence against a man who had abused them physically, emotionally and sexually for years.
Lucy also meets the mother of a woman stabbed to death by her husband who was discovered in her blood soaked bed by her seven year old son. In all three cases, the frightened women had appealed to the police but to no avail. These tragedies might have been averted if only the authorities had taken earlier warnings seriously.
In Moscow, Lucy talks to activists who are fighting back by supporting victims, pushing for legal reforms and drawing attention to the cause through art, video games and social media. And she meets a lone feminist MP in the Russian Duma who is trying to bring in restraining orders for violent husbands, boyfriends and family members. Today Russia has no such laws and domestic violence is not a standalone offence in either the criminal or the civil code.
(Image: Woman holding sign saying “What is it for? Stop violence!” at a rally in support of the Khachaturyan sisters. Credit: Sergei Konkov\TASS via Getty Images)
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0:00.0 | In a apartment block a father scolds his three daughters filming them on his phone as they stand, heads bowed facing the wall. I'm not sure I'm not sure I'm sure I'm sure I need to do |
0:27.0 | turn around you freak he yells at one of the girls and kicks her in the leg |
0:32.1 | this man who installed web cameras in the |
0:35.1 | home to monitor his daughter's every movement, physically and sexually abused |
0:40.6 | them for years. A warning, this story and others in this program are distressing. |
0:47.0 | By July 27th, 2018, the teenagers had had enough, their mother O'Relya tells me. |
0:57.0 | I don't know if they should be able to be. They were protecting themselves. |
1:05.0 | They actually had no choice. |
1:08.0 | Otherwise we'd have found the bodies of the three girls instead. |
1:12.0 | It could have easily been the other way around. I don't think |
1:16.9 | that they killed a person. I think they killed an animal. |
1:20.3 | I should be able to see. animal. |
1:23.0 | While Mikhail Hatcheruriam was asleep in an armchair, |
1:27.0 | his eldest daughter Christina, |
1:29.0 | age 19, pepper sprayed his face. |
1:32.0 | Then 17-year-old Maria stabbed him with a hunting knife, |
1:36.0 | while 18-year-old Angelina hit him on the head with a hammer. |
1:40.0 | The sisters face up to 20 years in prison. |
1:44.0 | This high profile murder case in which the women turned on their tormentor has focused attention on the epidemic |
1:55.8 | of domestic abuse in Russia. |
1:58.2 | I'm Lucy Ash and for this week's assignment on the BBC World Service, I'm in Moscow to meet the women who are fighting back |
2:06.0 | with a new wave of activism. |
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