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Police are looking for a 26-year-old man in Malaga after beating his ex-girlfriend, a minor under 16

2021-03-02T01:40:20.527Z


The young man attacked the girl after she told him she wanted to break up, according to her family. The break is a risky moment in sexist violence


A National Police vehicle in Malaga on February 16 CNP / Europa Press

The National Police are investigating a man in Malaga who has beaten up his ex-partner, a 16-year-old girl.

The first data of the investigation indicate that she had cut the relationship, something that he would not have accepted.

The 26-year-old man beat her repeatedly after finding her with her friends on one of the streets in her neighborhood, El Palo, east of the capital.

The investigated is in search and capture for this matter, according to police sources have explained.

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The events occurred last Saturday, just one day after she informed him that she had ended the relationship.

The break is a particularly delicate moment when it comes to sexist violence.

Every time a woman enters a police station to report a possible case of abuse, she is asked if she has announced to her partner that she is going to separate.

The police questionnaire to assess the risk of women includes a warning that the judges have been making almost from the beginning: when they say that they leave, the risk of aggression increases.

The man approached the surroundings of the adolescent's house, in the El Palo neighborhood.

"He broke a branch on his head and has two damaged vertebrae," explained the mother of the minor in La Sexta.

"He told him that if it was not for him, it was not for anyone," said the woman, who has called for anyone who has information about the aggressor to communicate it so that they can arrest him.

The girl was badly injured in a secluded area - a small tunnel under the road - until she was able to get out of there.

A man found her and helped her get to the local police station in El Palo.

Later she was transferred to the Regional Hospital of Malaga, where she was admitted for one day.

The agents have not yet been able to take a statement from the victim, something they will do in the coming days, since the minor still does not have the strength to go to do it.

The investigation, led by the Group of Minors (GRUME) of the National Police, remains open to find the whereabouts of the aggressor.

The

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attends to all victims of sexist violence 24 hours a day.

It does not leave a trace on the invoice, but it must be deleted from the call log of the mobile phone.

Minors can also go to the Anar Foundation telephone number 900 20 20 10 and citizens who witness an attack should call 112. In addition, women at risk can send an alert message through the Alertcops mobile application, which activates a geolocation that the police will receive.

A psychological assistance chat system is also available (on telephones 682 91 61 36 and 682 50 85 07).

Sexist violence in adolescence

One of the conclusions of the study 'The situation of violence against women in adolescence in Spain', presented in the middle of last month by the Government Delegation against Gender Violence, is that recent awareness campaigns are giving results to when it comes to reducing the sexist violence suffered by adolescents, especially psychological and control violence, within the couple.

But they suffer more sexual violence.



The study was carried out with a sample of 13,267 adolescents between the ages of 14 and 20 and compares the situation with that of previous reports, from 2013 and 2010. Between these years, there was an increase in gender-based violence in adolescent couples that the The study blamed the takeoff of social networks that transformed both the way adolescents interact and that of exercising violence.

However, as of 2013, some attitudes towards girls, such as “controlling her through the mobile phone”, “using their passwords to control her” and “using their passwords to impersonate her identity”, had less incidence despite the fact that the use of of new technologies is now much greater.



The most common forms of violence within the couple, according to the girls, are emotional abuse, be it insulting or ridiculing, or abusive control (“deciding to the smallest detail”), according to what 17% of women say they have suffered. the respondents.

As was the case in 2010, there are still more who acknowledge having suffered violence than those who admit to exercising it.

For example, only 3% of the boys say they have pressured to involve a girl in sexual behaviors in which she did not want to participate, compared to 11.1% of those who confessed to having been in that situation.

When asked about the relationship with the boy who exerted the violence, only 17% of the adolescents affirmed that he was their current partner compared to almost 21% of the boys.



Information from Cristina Saldaña.

Source: elparis

All life articles on 2021-03-02

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