Tuesday 5 January 2010

The Sound of Silence....

I just read an interesting story on the BBC News website about a government-backed bill in France that seeks to criminalise what they have dubbed 'psychological violence'. This is essentially domestic abuse in long-term relationships and marriages, but the sort that doesn't leave any bodily scars or evidence of any kind, apart from the battered psyche of the victim.

I understand the misgivings that people have of laws of this sort. Whenever a law involves stuff going on inside our homes, people tend to start running around screaming 'Big Brother!" "Nanny State!" and various other meaningless buzzwords. And frankly, I'm sceptical too. While I believe the intentions of such a law are noble, I am concerned about enforcement and a lack of evidence. Unless the French government really does become 'Big Brother' and puts cameras in people's houses, it will be very difficult to get enough evidence to prosecute. After all, this is psychological abuse, and so we have only the victim's word to go on, rather than any physical evidence.

But I have seen with my own eyes the effects of domestic abuse and 'psychological violence', and it is not pleasant. Not pleasant at all. It is bad enough that your partner is treating you like something less than dirt, but to not even receive the protection of the law leaves the victims of abusive relationships completely trapped and psychologically scarred. Clinical depression and other serious mental illnesses usually follow, which can lead to suicide or violent and spontaneous reprisals against their abusers after years of suffering.

I struggle to see, however, how introducing a new law on 'psychological violence' (which, though I do not know the French Legal System, would be covered in English Law under non-fatal offences against the person) would have any effect unless it is accompanied with new measures of enforcement and raising awareness. Unless in France domestic abuse would not be covered under the ordinary law of assault, I just don't see the point. What the French government should be doing is focusing on greater enforcement, better and fairer treatment of victims, and increasing awareness that these people do not have to suffer in silence.


(More to come as my research on the subject continues!)