Domestic violence is criminalised both under Law 24,417 (Protection Against Family Violence Law, enacted in 1994) and Law No. 26,485 (Comprehensive Protection Act to Prevent, Punish and Eradicate Violence against Women in Areas Where They Develop Their Relationships, enacted in 2009). Under the more recent legislation, domestic violence is defined comprehensively yet remains a misdemeanour offense, prosecuted in civil rather than criminal court. Only when violence is found to involve a “crime against sexual integrity” it is punishable by up to 20 years in prison.
[12] The implementation of this legislation is overseen by the
Consejo Nacional de la Mujer (CNM, National Council of Women) and the Office of Domestic Violence. However, according to the most recent Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) shadow report available, “CNM lacks strong national leadership as well as adequate human and economic resources to pursue concrete policies, as it does not receive sufficient funds from the national government for the application of the law.”
[13] Further, the Office of Domestic Violence was created by the Supreme Court of the Nation and has operated, since its inception in 2008, solely in the city of Buenos Aires and is not a proactive public policy, but only receives complaints.
While no official nationwide data is collected on domestic violence reporting or convictions, in 2012 the Office of Domestic Violence (which, again, operates only in Buenos Aires) received approximately 800 complaints a month, 63% from women.
[14] Because of the lack of nationally-collected data, there have also been attempts by NGOs to document the prevalence of domestic violence by looking at national media accounts of women killed in violent situations by partners or ex-partners.
[15] In 2011, the Argentine NGO
La Casa del Encuentro reported that 282 women were killed as a result of domestic violence.
[16]
Although there is no available data on police attitudes towards domestic violence victims, Argentina is a signatory country to UN Security Council Resolution 1325. In 2005, the CNM signed and implemented a contract with the Ministry of Justice and Human Rights, which involved the training of 1,200 police and security officers through seminars and workshops on gender violence and the preparation of a draft Police Action Protocol on family and gender violence. Seminars were offered in 2008 on implementing the protocol.
[17] In 2012, the Office of Domestic Violence, together with the Security Ministry, trained 1,850 members of the security forces in Buenos Aires on dealing with domestic violence.
[18]
The criminalisation of
rape is covered under Law No 25,087 (modifying the Criminal Code, enacted in 1999). The definition includes marital rape, and the perpetrator cannot avoid prosecution by marrying the victim. As with domestic violence, only when violence is found to involve a “crime against sexual integrity” are harsher punishments enacted. Further, the need to provide proof of sexual injury resulting from the rape can make conviction difficult.
[19] The implementation of this legislation is overseen by the CNM. Although nationwide statistics are not collected, the organisation ELA (
Equipo Latinamericano de Justicia y Genero) calculated from the 2007 National Crime Information System data that there were 2,173 female victims of rape, and 4,557 cases of other violent sexual crimes against women reported in that year.
[20] According to the most recently available information, in 2010 the Ministry of Justice National Crime Policy Office estimated that only one-third of sexual violence crimes were reported and only 10% resulted in conviction.
[21]
The Argentine Criminal Code includes
sexual harassment by defining sexual abuse as a crime which happens through violence, threat, coercion, intimidation, or abuse of an employment relationship, or of authority or of power.
[22] The penalties for sexual harassment vary widely, depending on the city and province, and can include anywhere from five days to four years in prison.
[23] There is no data on the frequency of reporting nor on attitudes towards sexual harassment. A recent shadow report to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW) suggests a failure both to provide a comprehensive anti-violence policy and to implement current legislation, stating: “Argentina lacks national, provincial, and local public policies for the prevention and eradication of violence… [and] current attempts to prevent or address the issue of violence are isolated actions that do not amount to a government policy.“
[24]
There is no law criminalising female genital mutilation, nor was evidence found indicating that it is practiced in Argentina.
More
Crimes of honour have been documented by the organisation ELA (
Equipo Latinamericano de Justicia y Genero). In 2009, ELA calculated National Crime Information System data from 2007, finding 235 reports of crimes of honour against women.
[25]
According to the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights, who held a hearing on the Situation of Human Rights of Women in Argentina in March 2013,
indigenous women are especially vulnerable to human rights abuses in Argentina.
[26]
As in other parts of Latin America,
femicide – or the killing of women – is a particular issue for concern in Argentina. In 2012, Congress passed an amendment to Article 80 of the Criminal Code, increasing the penalty for femicide to life in prison for men who kill women, or people identifying themselves as female. The law includes a clause about “extraordinary circumstances,” which would allow a judge to lessen the sentence for femicide to between 8 and 25 years.
[27]
Violence against
lesbian and transgender women has been reported in Argentina, with 19 murders of transgender people reported by the Trans Murder Monitoring project in 2013.
[28] In 2012, Argentina passed a Gender Identity Law guaranteeing rights for transgender people.
[29]
In 2012, the Supreme Court decriminalised
abortion in cases of rape, prior to which abortion was only available in order to save the woman’s life (upon judicial permission), when her health was at risk, and when a mentally handicapped woman was raped. This ruling involved a re-interpretation of Section 2, Article 6 of the Argentine Criminal Code, which says that abortion is not a punishable act "if the pregnancy stems from a rape or an attack on the modesty of a woman of feeble mind" to include all women – not just “feeble minded” – and allows that women who have been raped no longer be required to receive judicial permission to have an abortion.
[30] According to the most recently available information from the Department of Health, abortion-related deaths are the leading cause of maternal mortality in Argentina
[31]
[12] US State Dept. (2013) [13] ELA et al. (2010) [14] US State Dept. (2013) [15] Amnesty International (2009); La casa del Encuentro(2009) [16] Argentina Independent (2012b) [17] CEDAW (2008) [18] US State Dept. (2013) [19] US State Dept. (2013) [20] ELA et al. (2010), p. 9 [21] US State Dept. (2010) [22] Law No 25,087 (modifying the Criminal Code), 1999 [23] US State Dept. (2013) [24] ELA et al. (2010) [25] ELA et al. (2010), p. 9 [26] Center for Human Rights and Humanitarian Law (2013) [27] Argentina Independent (2012c) [28] Transgender Europe (2013) [29] REDLACTRANS and International HIV/AIDS Alliance (2012), p. 30 [30] BBC News (2012) [31] ELA et al. (2010), p. 9