A study has proposed a more equitable framework for shelters for abused women.
The report is a collaboration of the Hlanganisa Institute for Development in Southern Africa, National Shelter Movement of South Africa and the Heinrich Boell Foundation.
It describes violence as “casting a long shadow over family life in South Africa”.
It reports that between 2015 and 2016, 275 536 applications for protection from domestic violence were lodged with the courts.
Women sought shelter for a range of reasons, which included violence from another family member, rape and destitution, while others had experienced forced labour, human trafficking or kidnapping and some had been identified as persons at risk of abuse.
The report also found women’s access to psychological and psychiatric services were “limited”. “The department of health must consider how to make mental health services more accessible to shelter residents.”
The report found that:
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