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Politics

Moroccan initiative takes on domestic violence

Fatima Ezzahra Ouazzouz
January 16, 2019

Victims of domestic violence are often unaware of resources available to them and are too afraid to ask. In Morocco, a new initiative aims to change that by helping women take legal action against their violent husbands.

https://p.dw.com/p/3Bg4P
Raise Your Voice initiative meets
Image: DW/ F. Ouazzouz

Now 23, a mother of two and an education worker, Salma remembers her marriage as seven years of being bloodied and bruised. Her husband raped her repeatedly, she said. He beat her and threatened her with murder. Her face was constantly swollen from being struck, and she developed an addiction to the drugs that he forced her to take to keep her under control. In that state, she did not have the strength to divorce him.

"Domestic violence destroys the dignity of women," Salma said.

Salma broke her silence, sharing her experiences on a radio station that works with Fais entendre ta voix (Make Your Voice Heard), one of several initiatives to empower women in Morocco.

Though there are laws in place to provide recourse to women who are raped by their husbands, the topic remains largely taboo in Morocco. However, the radio station brought Salma's story to the public, and the initiative supported her psychologically and legally. This provided Salma with the strength she needed to divorce her husband and to report him for battery and rape.

Marokko Portrait Khadija Khafid
Khafid says scores of women have shared their experiences through the initiativeImage: DW/E. Ouazzouz

Efforts at outreach

Financed in part by by the Euro-Mediterranean Foundation of Support to Human Rights Defenders, the initiative encourages womenwho have experienced domestic violence to speak publicly about their suffering. The initiative serves to empower women by offering them legal options for defending themselves and escaping their abusers. It also encourages women to report violence and harassment in public spaces.

"Over 120 women have taken part in our seminars," said Khadija Khafid, a founder of the initiative.

In addition to working with the radio station, the organization also operates a multimedia website that presents scenarios of domestic violence, accompanied by advice on how women can take action. The families of women who have escaped abusers have expressed their support for the initiative and the assistance it has offered to their loved ones.

Morocco's #masaktach campaign

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