PARLIAMENTS UNITED IN COMBATING DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN. Meeting of the Regional Group A

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AS/EGA/DVC (2007) PV2 (prov) aegadvc_2007pv2prov 18 December 2007 PARLIAMENTS UNITED IN COMBATING DOMESTIC VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN Meeting of the Regional Group A Organised by the National Parliament of Finland In co-operation with the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council of Europe Parliament of Finland, Helsinki 10 October 2007 DRAFT MINUTES OF THE MEETING LIST OF SUGGESTED ACTIONS

The Regional Grouping A of Contact Parliamentarians involved in the campaign Stop domestic violence met on 10 October 2007 on the premises of the Finnish Parliament on the invitation of Mr. Jukka GUSTAFSSON, contact parliamentarian for Finland. Ms Carina HÄGG, contact parliamentarian for Sweden and regional coordinator of the regional grouping co-chaired this working seminar. The meeting w opened by Ms Sinikka HURSKAINEN, chief of the Finnish Delegation to the Parliamentary Assembly of the Council Europe. The aim of this meeting w to exchange best practices to combat domestic violence, which are necessary for parliamentarian work. Aspects needing improvement were discussed. As a result of a consultation procedure with all members of group A [still in progress], new lines of action for the second - and final - phe of the campaign were proposed. Conclusions Ms HÄGG concluded the seminar by repeating that Domestic violence is not a private issue but a question of human rights. She highlighted the responsibility of the Contact Parliamentarians to cooperate which each other and to learn from each other. She invited the members of the Regional grouping A of Contact Parliamentarians involved in the Campaign Stop Domestic violence to adopt a list of actions to be implemented within the framework of the campaign. This list also encompses suggested actions that could be supported by the Parliamentary Assembly, subject to financial availability. List of Actions NR A 1 ACTIONS TO BE IMPLEMENTED DURING THE CAMPAIGN Exchanging action plans: providing the secretariat with the electronic format in national language or/and English version for publication on the website of the Campaign DEADLINE FOR IMPLEMENT ATION OF ACTIONS As soon A 2 Study visit between parliaments As soon A 3 A 4 Use the opportunity provided by the Nordic Council and the Baltic Assembly to encourage initiatives to combat domestic violence against women Evaluate the financial contribution spent by each country to combat domestic violence: a minimum objective of 1 Euro on average per inhabitant in all Member States As soon As soon CONTACT PARLIAMENTARIANS/ 1. Ms. Carina HÄGG 2.... 3.... 1. 2.... 3.... 1. 2.... 3.... A 5.. A 6.. A 7.. 1. Lise CHRISTOFFERSEN 2. Jukka GUSTAFSSON 3. Carina HÄGG 4. Morten ØSTERGAARD 5. Marija Aušrinė PAVILIONIENĖ 6. Mailis REPS 7. Steingrímur J. SIGFÚSSUN 2

Minutes of the meeting Ms HURSKAINEN welcomed participants and praised Mr. Mendes Bota s report, although she regretted the limited participation in the plenary debate and vote on 5 October 2007. Historical Development of the Fight against Domestic Violence in Finland. Johanna NIEMI KIESILÄINEN gave an introduction describing the situation in Finland. The country had witnessed numerous positive developments in the fight against domestic violence. Nevertheless she emphised that, despite positive progress, domestic violence still remains pervive. Ms NIEMI KIESILÄINEN considered that the criteria identified in PACE Resolution 1582 (2007) were less ambitious than the provisions contained in Recommendation Rec (2002) 5 of the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe on the Protection of Women against Violence. She w therefore disappointed by the Resolution adopted by PACE. The current Finnish Programme to prevent domestic violence is centred on the combating of alcoholrelated violence. The main legal interference in the implementation of a concrete policy is the neutral tone which is adopted for regulation. There is no possibility to include gender in the law. In fact, there is no definition of violence against women. She stressed that reform laws are gender-blind. Thanks to the innovation of Aggravated Battery, it w to raise the level of awareness about this matter. A maximum penalty of 10 years can be applied in ce of knife or weapon attacks, grievous bodily injury, brutal or cruel injury or aggravated battery defined in the Finnish criminal code. It gave the legislative body the capacity to introduce a kind of nuanced gendering if one considers that men are potentially more harmful than women. The Role of Mediation to Combat Domestic Violence There h been a long tradition of using mediation in Finland, especially within the context of combating domestic violence. It takes place when the police and the prosecutor agree to it. Mediation is complicated because: It is not a private issue; Society may send an unclear message; There is no equality in the mediation. Johanna NIEMI KIESILÄINEN indicated that she stood against the use of mediation in ces of domestic violence. It is only when the facts are analysed that domestic violence starts to be considered a crime. This is due to the work of the police force, which is in charge of: The gathering of evidence; The use of detention and other meures (Reform of Detention Act in 2002) In 1999, a good reform of the Protection Order w launched. However, this reform w not applied in the context of domestic violence. The victim had to gather the evidence and to report suspected crimes. This w modified in 2005 with the reform of the Protection Order, which introduced the capacity to remove the prosecutor from his home. It is usually implemented in very violent ces but this can mean that help arrives too late. Ms NIEMI KIESILÄINEN also recalled that the protection order is not a substitute for criminal prosecution. 3

The reforms which are needed A change in attitudes is needed. The perpetrators should be the ones who have to deal with the problem. It is necessary to obtain more knowledge about gender violence and the effectiveness of laws. Ms NIEMI KIESILÄINEN considered that gender impact analysis is necessary. Men s response to this is often displaced: Violence of women towards men; The situation of children when a divorce occurs. An action plan is needed in Finland. There are many good examples of action plans: Sweden; Norway, United States, Spain, Portugal; Denmark, which h launched a 3rd action plan. Amnesty International indicated the priorities that should be considered in the future action plan of Finland: Fill the white spaces in the map: there is no shelter in Lapland and a big difference in standard between the existing shelters. Sometimes, the shelter is only a hotel room rented by the municipality; Support the victim; Support the witnesses (children) and the perpetrator; Develop a professional approach (she recalled Helena EWALD s work to give efficient education tools to professionals); Funding. In Sweden, the Parliament can evaluate the cost of domestic violence. Women s Rights belongs to the domain of Human Rights (There is also the necessity to monitor the expenses); The action plan will be necessary to correct this process; Prevention. A communication policy is required to move people; Combat electronic violence (non-solicited survey, humiliation via the internet); Research and data collection. It is important to gather local statistics; International Cooperation. Amnesty is standing for an international action plan; It is necessary to create a body dedicated to combating domestic violence (the Prevention Unit listed the needs of such an administration). This position w supported by Pirja PEHKHONEN from National Women s Line in Finland. The situation in Lithuania and Sweden The situation in Lithuania Marija Aušrinė PAVILIONIENĖ, recalling Lithuania s pt, indicated that Lithuania seems not to have made much progress in this area, although the country h achieved so much during the lt decade compared to other countries represented in the seminar. Only a small team of people understand the issue of domestic violence in Lithuania. Psing laws costs a lot of energy. Because of History and also the Lithuanian traditions, the Family is likened to a ctle. She recently introduced a concept of Law that should lead to a draft bill to criminalise domestic violence. This is the second attempt to that effect. Carina HÄGG indicated that at first Sweden did not sociate sufficiently combating domestic violence with the promotion of human rights. She indicated that the cost of combating domestic violence is nothing if one considers it is an sault of Human Rights. The Amnesty International representative commented that there should not be any violence in the ctle i.e. the Lithuanian family. 4

Why the Swedish Model? Active feminist movements have the support from all political parties. The publication of figures indicating the cost of domestic violence had a very strong impact in Parliament. The fact that 40% of the MPs in the Swedish Parliament are women w a definite advantage to taking the cause on board. The action plan is definitely a plus hidden problems become more apparent. It provides the opportunity to deal directly with deeper problems. The aim of the governmental action is to give victims the opportunity to recover properly and the capacity to start a new life somewhere else. Budgeting the fight against Domestic Violence The budgetary priority in Finland is to set-up a focal point at national level. Ms HAUTALA would suggest that the chairpersons of the parliamentary committees dealing with this issue meet to negotiate with the technical group of ministers on combating domestic violence. To be fully operational and efficient, the national focal point would need to work in close co-operation with local and regional administrations. Ms HAUTALA indicated that Finland would use the experience of Sweden to draft its own action plan. Carina HÄGG also stressed the importance of making use of external aid to combat domestic violence. Sweden recently adopted an action plan on External Aid. The action plan is published on the website of the Campaign. She encourages other parliamentarians to adopt such an action plan. 5

List of Participants Parliamentarians Finland Jukka GUSTAFSSON Vice-Chairperson of the Employment and Equality Committee Contact Parliamentarian for Finland Heidi HAUTALA Chairperson of the Legal Affairs Committee Sinikka HURSKAINEN Chairperson of the Finnish delegation to the PACE Lithuania Sweden Marija Aušrinė PAVILIONIENĖ Deputy Chairperson of the Women Parliamentary Group Deputy Chairperson of the Committee on European Affairs Contact Parliamentarian for Lithuania Carina HÄGG Regional Co-ordinator of Group A Contact Parliamentarian for Sweden Excused Denmark Estonia Iceland Norway Morten ØSTERGAARD Contact Parliamentarian for Denmark Mailis REPS Contact Parliamentarian for Estonia Steingrímur J. SIGFÚSSON Contact Parliamentarian for Iceland Lise CHRISTOFFERSEN Contact Parliamentarian for Norway Participants Elena EWALDS Ministry of Social Affairs and Health Senior Officer Member of the Council of Europe Tk Force to combat violence against women, including domestic violence Johanna NIEMI-KIESILÄINEN National Research Institute of Legal Policy Docent/researcher Pia Puu OKSANEN Amnesty International Finland Women s Rights Expert Pirja PEHKHONEN Naisten Linja National Women's Line in Finland 6

Secretariat of National Parliaments Maria KURIKKALA Secretary of the Department of International Affairs of the Finnish Parliament (Eduskunta) Kirsti PULKKA-ERICSON Senior Advisor in the International Department of the Swedish Parliament (Riksdag) Secretariat of the PACE Lamine DIALLO Deputy Secretary to the PACE Committee on Equal Opportunities for Women and Men Guillaume PARENT Deputy Secretary to the PACE Committee on Equal Opportunities for Women and Men 7