Wednesday, May 8, 2013

Italy deaths as Genoa ship hits control tower


 
Rescuers have been searching in what is left of the control tower at the port of Genoa


Seven people have died and three are missing after a container ship crashed into a control tower in the Italian port of Genoa, officials say.

The Jolly Nero smashed into the 50m (164ft) concrete and glass tower late on Tuesday, causing it to collapse.

Rescue workers have been searching in the rubble for survivors while divers are scouring the surrounding water.

Local media reports say prosecutors have placed the ship's captain under investigation for manslaughter.

The vessel has also been impounded and its "black box" seized by investigators, according to Italy's Ansa news agency.
'Utterly shocked'
The accident occurred at about 23:00 on Tuesday (21:00 GMT), when a shift change was taking place in the control tower and about 13 people were thought to be inside.

Some of the bodies were recovered from the tower's lift.

The Jolly Nero was manoeuvring out of the port with the help of tugboats in calm conditions, on its way to Naples, reports said.

The cause of the crash was not immediately clear, but Genoa's Il Secolo XIX newspaper quoted the Jolly Nero's captain as saying that two engines appeared to have failed and "we lost control of the ship".

The head of the Genoa Port Authority, Luigi Merlo, told the newspaper: "It's very difficult to explain how this could have happened because the ship should not have been where it was."

Two tug boats were moving the vessel, there was a port pilot on board, and sea conditions were "perfect", he added.

"It's a terrible tragedy. We're in turmoil, speechless," Mr Merlo told local TV.

Undated photo of Genoa port control tower The tower was a concrete and glass structure overlooking Italy's busiest port
Aftermath of an accident involving the Jolly Nero container ship in the port of Genoa, 8 May 2013 All that remained of the tower on Wednesday was rubble
The Jolly Nero docked in the port of Genoa, 8 May 2013 The Jolly Nero has been impounded and its captain was being questioned

The ship's owner, Stefano Messina, who arrived at the port soon after the crash, had tears in his eyes as he told journalists: "We are all utterly shocked. Nothing like this has ever happened before, we are desperate."

Genoa is Italy's busiest port. Mayor Marco Doria said there was an average of 14 accidents a year, but that the incident late on Tuesday was unprecedented.

All that was left of the control tower after the crash was a buckled metal exterior staircase.

"It was an incredible sight: the control tower was leaning perilously," the port's nightwatchman told La Repubblica newspaper.

Six of those killed have so far been identified. Two of them - Maurizio Potenza and Michele Robazza - were pilots for the port. Another three - Fratantonio Daniel, David Morella and Marco De Candussio - were coastguard officers. The sixth was Sergio Basso, who worked for a tugboat operator.

Four people were being treated for injuries, two of whom were in critical condition.

"The main injuries are fractures, crushed body parts, significant traumas," emergency services doctor Andrea Furgani said.

The Jolly Nero is almost 240 metres (787 feet) long and has a gross tonnage of nearly 40,600 tonnes. It is owned by the Italian firm Ignazio Messina & Co.

The crash revived memories of the accident involving the Costa Concordia cruise ship off the Italian island of Giglio in January 2012, which left 32 people dead.

Graphic showing route of Jolly Nero on evening of 7 May 2013

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How will Imran Khan's fall affect Pakistan's election?


Rescue workers rush Imran Khan to hospital in Lahore, Pakistan, 7 May 2013 Imran Khan's fall prompted a rare moment of fair play on Pakistan's political playing fields

 

In an election called the most unpredictable in Pakistan's history, the campaign took a turn no-one expected.

Imran Khan, a rising political star, took a fall.

Images of the country's former cricket captain tumbling from a wooden lift next to a stage played over and over again on Pakistan's many 24-hour channels.

And, with his fall, the political high ground rose. His chief challenger, Nawaz Sharif, declared at his rally he was cancelling his campaigning the next day in sympathy and solidarity.

Political leaders across the spectrum sent wishes and offered prayers.

President Asif Ali Zardari sent flowers to the Lahore hospital where Mr Khan was under observation after suffering a head injury that needed several stitches.

Suddenly, there seemed to be a rare moment of fair play on the political playing fields.

After weeks of denouncing and demeaning each other, bitter rivals ended the invective.
Point-scoring?
Across social media, where this election has a life of its own, comments poured in to commend Mr Sharif, the two-time prime minister now facing the fight of his political life against Mr Khan.

Imran Khan supporters pray for their leader's health in Karachi, Pakistan, 7 May 2013 Politicians and supporters alike have been offering prayers for Imran Khan's recovery

"Fantastic maturity"; "brotherly spirit"; "classy" were just some of the adjectives spilling across a Pakistani Twitter timeline.

But in a country where political debate is a popular sport, others landed a harder punch.

"All busy scoring points," wrote one tweep.

Pakistani writer Abbas Nasir, commenting on Mr Sharif's move, tweeted: "Shrewd political manoeuvre rather than a gracious act/gesture. Should be seen as such. Probably work too. "

British Pakistani writer Kamila Shamsie tweeted me to say: "That is fair play but then we have to ask: Why have there been no suspended rallies when candidates are killed?"

Her message came from the southern city of Karachi, where candidates and party offices are attacked almost daily by the Pakistani Taliban, who've declared this election unIslamic.

Three major parties are on their hit-list, but not Mr Khan's Movement for Justice or Mr Sharif's Pakistan Muslim League.

On the same day as Mr Khan's accident, a bomb targeted the brother of a candidate for the Pakistan People's Party in north-west Pakistan. Zahir Khan was killed along with five others.

Footage shows the moment that Imran Khan fell from the makeshift lift

Neither Nawaz Sharif nor Imran Khan has come out strongly in this campaign to condemn the violence against their rivals as a brutal assault on democracy.

"Three provinces are facing dire violence but unfortunately the political parties have not got together on a common platform to unite against the Taliban," said Pakistani writer and journalist Ahmed Rashid.

Both Mr Sharif and Mr Khan offered defensive replies when I asked them about their ability to campaign in relative safely, while others were under major threat.

Mr Khan insisted he wasn't pro-Taliban. He described himself as anti-war and emphasised it was time to talk to the Taliban.

Mr Sharif protested that he had expressed sympathy with victims and their families, and that his party had been targeted too.
Spin doctors' tail-spin
The debate is certain to go on until election day and beyond over whether sympathy votes will now go to Mr Khan as he emerges, bandaged, from hospital to continue the fight.

TV grab taken from Dunya News shows injured Imran Khan speaking from his a hospital in Lahore, 7 May 2013 From his hospital bed, Mr Khan urged voters to play their part in 'a battle for this country'

And whether Mr Sharif's response was shrewd or sympathetic, will the man who's been regarded as the front runner escape any political injury?

As the day began, the popular Dawn newspaper cartoonist Zahoor had depicted Imran Khan painting a portrait of a smug Nawaz Sharif falling from a cliff.

When the day drew to a close, it was all about Mr Khan falling from a stage.

And from his hospital bed, the wounded politician spoke: "On May 11th, consider this your battle, it's not just my battle, it's a battle for this country."

A televised moment of high drama sent spin doctors, on all sides, into a tail-spin.

No-one can say with certainty here what the next day, next rally, and this next election, will bring.

When people disappear, investigators scramble for clues

Felix DeJesus, holding a banner showing his daughter's photograph Felix DeJesus, shown in 2004 with a banner of his daughter's photograph, waited for years for her return
People rarely reappear after vanishing for a decade. In most cases that remain unsolved for years, the outcome is grim.
Lizabeth Wilson, 13, was walking home from a swimming pool in Prairie Village, Kansas, with her brother, John, 11, on a July evening in 1974. She never made it back.
Her disappearance shocked the people who lived in the community in the suburbs of Kansas City, Missouri.
By the time I met John at St Anne's school in Prairie Village, his sister had been missing for more than two years.
John and I used to listen to Styx albums together and drink Bacardi and Coke at parties. He had straw-blond hair and freckles - like his sister.
Amanda Berry, middle, reunited with her sister just hours after being freed Amanda Berry, middle, was reunited with her sister just hours after being freed
Like the other students at St Anne's, I thought about her often and wondered what had happened.
In the 1990s I visited the place where her skull was found. It was a grassy area near a farmhouse in Lenexa, Kansas - desolate and quiet.
A police officer told me at the time that authorities thought they knew who the killer was. But they did not have enough evidence.
"We're keeping a close eye on him," the officer said.
In 2003 a former janitor, John Horton, 56, was arrested. He is now serving a life sentence for the killing of Lizabeth Wilson.
It was a cold case - now closed. Luckily, things turned out differently for Amanda Berry, Gina DeJesus and Michelle Knight.
The three women went missing - all from the same street, Lorain Avenue, in Cleveland. Knight, who was 20, vanished in 2002.
Berry was 16 in 2003, the year she disappeared. DeJesus vanished about a year later. She was 14.
They were all found - alive and well - on Monday at a house in downtown Cleveland. A school bus driver, Ariel Castro, and his brothers Pedro and Onil, have been arrested.
"The nightmare is over," said FBI Special Agent Stephen Anthony.
Today, investigators and people around the world are struggling to figure out how such a nightmare could have occurred.
They want to know how three women could have remained missing for so many years.
FBI agents and police detectives are investigating the three cases and trying to determine in what ways they were connected to each other.
"They're looking for more physical evidence and they're photographing the layout of the house," a Cleveland police officer who is familiar with the investigation tells me. He asks to remain anonymous because he is not authorised to speak with a journalist.
Some clues have emerged.
A family member of Knight told the Cleveland Plain Dealer her relatives thought at the time she "probably left on her own".
For that reason, authorities did not pursue the case as aggressively as they might have done had if they'd thought she were held against her will.
The Cleveland police officer says that at the time of Knight's disappearance, her family members showed a certain "lack of concern".
Man holds a copy of Cleveland Plain Dealer newspaper The Cleveland Plain Dealer reported on the disappearances
Former FBI agent Raymond Batvinis says it is simply too early to say what happened - or to place blame.
Nevertheless, Batvinis says he understands why the authorities and the family members may have been sceptical about Knight's disappearance.
"To be very frank with you, people go missing all the time," Batvinis says. "People often go missing because they want to go missing."
With children, however, the situation is different. Most of these abductions are carried out by a family member - during a custody dispute, for example - and are eventually resolved.
When a child is kidnapped by a stranger, though, investigators know they must work quickly.

Start Quote

The number-one motivation is sex”
End Quote Harry Trombitas Former FBI special agent
"The number-one motivation is sex," says Harry Trombitas, who served as an FBI special agent from 1983-2012.
"The offender grabs a child - engages in sex - then feels he has to get rid of the child. They want to put distance between themselves and the case."
In the vast majority of those cases, Trombitas says, the investigators find the kidnapped children and bring them home.
But as he explains, they pursue leads immediately. Based on interviews they have done with offenders, they know that they have only three hours from the time a child is seized to find him or her alive.
In the cases that do not end well, the killings often occur fast.
Trombitas recalls what it was like to spend time at the home of a 12-year-old boy who was kidnapped in Nebraska in 1982.
"Every time the phone rang, the mom would just shake like a leaf," Trombitas says.
Three days after disappearing, the boy was found dead with stab wounds.
In some cases, the family is still waiting.
In 2007, 14-year-old Ashley Summers, disappeared from the same area where Berry, DeJesus and Knight had once vanished.
Summers has not yet been found.
Investigators say that for unsolved cases they often depend upon the media and people in the community to help them find the kidnapping victims and catch the offenders.
Sarah Jakiel, the deputy director of the Polaris Project, which fights human trafficking, encourages people to watch for signs that someone may be held against his or her will.
If people are coming and going from a house at odd hours, especially a place with boarded-up windows, barbed wire and security cameras, then neighbours should pay attention and consider notifying the authorities.
"Follow your instincts," says Jakiel.
The house in Cleveland where the women were held Investigators are searching the house in Cleveland where the women were held
People who live in the area can be vital to the case. A neighbour helped Berry escape from the house in Cleveland, for example.
Still, cases in which someone disappears - and is found safe years later - are rare.
John grew up without knowing what happened to his sister in Prairie Village. Sadly, he found out years later.
One can only hope that the family of Ashley Summers will hear soon - and that it will be good news.


Benazir Bhutto still at heart of PPP election campaign


PPP supporters at a Lahore rally (6 May 2013) Despite the crowds it has drawn, the PPP's campaign has been waged without a central charismatic figure

At the Bhutto family home in Naudero, Larkana, the mood in the run-up to Pakistan's elections is subdued.

In one of the back rooms sits a woman with spectacles and a white shawl wrapped around her head. Surrounded by dozens of women workers, she is busy finalising her party's plans for polling day.

She is not just any candidate: Faryal Talpur is President Asif Zardari's sister and is standing for election in the constituency of former Prime Minister and Pakistan People's Party (PPP) stalwart Benazir Bhutto.

Known as Addi Faryal - or Sister Faryal in Sindhi - Ms Talpur has been the most powerful woman in the party for the last five years.

She does not hold an official position, but has exerted considerable influence on government and party affairs.

Faryal Talpur is trying to enliven an otherwise moribund PPP election campaign

As the head of state, Mr Zardari cannot campaign openly for his party.

His son and the young leader of the party, Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari, has stayed away from the campaign trail, apparently amid security concerns over a possible Taliban attack on parties the militants see as being too liberal.

This has effectively left Ms Talpur in charge of the PPP's unusually low-key campaign.

Low-key campaign

The absence of a central charismatic figure from the family addressing mass rallies has hampered the PPP's efforts to rally its support base.

Party candidates have faced tough questions by angry voters over their performance.

A clandestine PPP campaign meting on a roof of a building in Peshswar,on 1 May 2013 Liberal parties like the PPP have to hold clandestine election meetings because of the militant threat

Larkana has been a stronghold of the Bhuttos for more than four decades.

In 2008, the PPP was swept into power after the death of its leader, Benazir Bhutto, because there was a wave of sympathy for the party.

Five years on, in this election, the party still appears to be using her death to get itself re-elected.

The PPP's evocative TV advertisement campaign revolves around Ms Bhutto's assassination and makes little or no mention of the last government's performance in office.

"Today, when I ask for your votes in the name of Benazir Bhutto it is because she remains our leader, she is a hugely symbolic figure," says Ms Talpur.

She vehemently defends her party's track record in office, saying the government tried its best to deliver on its promise of building roads, schools, hospitals and creating jobs.

But there is a growing sense of disillusionment with the party. Many voters say they feel let down by their government and accuse local leaders of being out of touch.
'Unprecedented corruption'
Imdad Ali Mirbahar runs a grocery shop in a windowless mud hut. He says he has voted for the PPP all his life - but not anymore.

"Their ministers didn't care much for the people - like Benazir used to," he says.

Pakistan elections 11 May 2013

  • Polling stations open from 8am to 5pm local time. There are 86,189,802 registered voters - 48,592,387 men and 37,597,415 women
  • Five thousand candidates will be standing for 342-seat National Assembly, 272 of which are directly elected. There are 11,692 Provincial Assembly candidates
  • Fifty-one candidates are vying for the NA-48 constituency seat in Islamabad, the highest number in the country.
  • More than 600,000 security personnel including 50,000 troops will be deployed to guard against militant attacks
  • There are more than 73,000 polling stations - 20,000 of which have been earmarked as a security risk
  • Five security personnel will be stationed at each polling station, with up to double that number at those facing the gravest security threats
  • Polls will mark the first time that a civilian government has completed a full five-year term and handed over to an elected successor

"They were busy buying properties and expensive cars while poor people like me were suffering."

Disappointment with the PPP is allowing smaller regional parties to make in-roads into the Bhutto heartland.

Mehtab Akbar Rashdi, a former TV personality and retired civil servant. She is contesting polls for the first time on the ticket of Pakistan Muslim League-Functional.

She feels voters are determined to punish the previous government through the ballot box.

"People are not looking to the PPP for solutions anymore," she says.

"They have experienced bad governance, lawlessness and unprecedented corruption under the PPP. So while they may still feel emotionally attached to the Bhuttos, they are not going to vote for their party candidates."

It is true that the PPP has deep roots among millions of rural poor, especially in Sindh province. And unlike most parties, workers and leaders of the PPP have a long track record of standing up to military dictators in Pakistan.

But the political landscape in Pakistan appears to be shifting - slowly but surely.

There is a growing desire among voters for change, and to see their elected leaders held to account.

For many concerned with Pakistan's democratic evolution, that can only be a good thing, regardless of who comes out on top.

As for President Zardari's party, many believe its parliamentary strength may well be reduced significantly in these elections, even if the PPP remains a key player in Pakistani politics.


Royal Opera premieres 'darker' Hansel and Gretel ballet


Hansel and Gretel The production at Covent Garden, London has a deliberately cinematic feel

Two hundred years ago the Brothers Grimm published their version of the German folk tale Hansel and Gretel. Now the Royal Opera House in London is staging what it calls "a dark, adult take" on the story - a new ballet set in the America of the 1950s and 1960s.

Until now the best-known adaptation of Hansel and Gretel has been the opera of the same name written 120 years ago by classical composer Engelbert Humperdinck.

Now Liam Scarlett - appointed artist-in-residence at the Royal Opera House in London at 26 - has created a full-length ballet about the young brother and sister who get lost in the woods and encounter an evil witch.

"The Grimm tales were always in the back of my mind as possible material for ballet. Partly it's their malicious dark side. But I also love their simplicity: they were meant for children and most are only a few pages long. The sentences are simplistic and to the point and the writing works brilliantly."

Liam Scarlett Liam Scarlett has introduced a lot of twists to the traditional story

Ultimately Jacob and Wilhelm Grimm collected a couple of hundred tales. So why did Scarlett stick to one of the best-known for his new work?

"It's true the basic story is familiar, but in recent years there have been surprisingly few adaptations. Yet there are lots of modern-day references to play with.

"Hansel and Gretel deals with child abduction and a hostage situation. There's a dysfunctional family and parents in economic crisis. Then there's a malevolent stepmother who's beating the children and a cowardly father who can't even pay the rent.

"The children think they're older and better than they are: in some ways they're as conniving as the stepmother. All those things you can find in modern society too."

The production at Covent Garden has a deliberately cinematic feel. The music is by Dan Jones, who acknowledges the influence of the great Hollywood composers. (Recent work includes the music for the TV series Any Human Heart.)

"With such a dark fairytale, which we've re-set in the American mid-west, we wanted to reference the great legacy of American horror films and psychological suspense. So inevitably Hitchcock comes up and the composer Bernard Herrmann who wrote such beautiful scores for him."
Investigation of fear
Herrmann, who died in 1975, wrote music for Hitchcock classics such as North by Northwest, Vertigo and Psycho.

"The references aren't specific but subtle and general. But psychologically Hitchcock and Herrmann helped create the vessel we've put the story in.

"But American composers in the 1950s and 1960s were themselves investigating European music of the early 20th Century. So everyone learns from the best of what came before.

Leanne Cope Cope is one of a group of Royal Ballet dancers to be playing Gretel

"And we're not slaves to the idea of making the score feel filmic or to the American setting in general. Everything has to help the story."

Jones says the new ballet is essentially an investigation of fear. "Liam's still a young choreographer but he set out the demands of the story brilliantly clearly.

"It's children's worst fears made real - the ballet's not about pantomime shock-horror effects. Hansel and Gretel are rejected from home and have no one looking after them and have to fight to survive.

"Liam has foiled simplistic takes on heroes and villains at every stage. Whenever you think you have the story sorted in your mind, suddenly there's a brilliant new twist."

Leanne Cope is one of the dancers playing Gretel. She's previously danced child roles such as Clara in The Nutcracker but says Gretel is more complex.

"She's definitely older than her years: she has to look after her father and Hansel too. But when they're trekking through the forest and when they meet the witch, she's definitely frightened and I have to show that.

The ballet is being produced at the Linbury theatre, the smaller auditorium at the Royal Opera House.

"It's a traverse staging, with the audience on either side of us. They'll be so close. You still have to play a character fully but performances need to be more pared down and cinematic."

The run at the Linbury has almost sold out, but the Royal Opera House is programming further performances early next year.

Liam Scarlett is aware he's sometimes spoken of as British ballet's "next big thing". But for now he's concentrating on making his new show work psychologically.

"I've been making my own fairytale. I've put a lot into it from what I feared most as a child. As adults we have economic fears or we fear not being able to sustain a normal life. But deep down it's the same basic emotion.

"I wouldn't really say the piece is for children at all. And I think it might open the eyes of a few grown-ups."

Hansel and Gretel runs from 8 to 11 May at the Royal Opera House's

Why are Indian women being attacked on social media?

Sagarika Ghose Sagarika Ghose has stopped giving her views on Twitter


What does a top woman journalist do when she is threatened regularly with gang rape and stripping on Twitter?

And what about when her teenage daughter's name and details of her class and school are tweeted too?

"It was very disturbing. I didn't know what to do. So for a few days I had her picked up and dropped off to school in our car and not via public transport, because I was really scared," says Sagarika Ghose, a well-known face of Indian television news, who anchors prime-time bulletins on CNN-IBN and writes for a leading newspaper.

On Twitter, she has more than 177,000 followers.

"Targeting me for my journalism is fine. But when it is sexist and foul-mouthed abuse which insults my gender identity I get incredibly angry. In the beginning I used to retaliate, but that would lead to more abuse."

Ms Ghose says women abused on Twitter in India tend to to be "liberal and secular".

"The abusers are right wing nationalists, angry at women speaking their mind. They have even coined a term for us - 'sickular'."

Ms Ghose has now decided to stop putting out her views on Twitter.

"I just put out our programmes and disseminate information. Though I still re-tweet some of the abusive tweets because there has to be awareness of what women journalists face. What else can you do?"
Vicious attack
Kavita Krishnan, a prominent Delhi-based women's activist, was attacked viciously during a recent online chat on violence against women on Rediff.com, one of India's leading news websites.

"It began well. I had answered a few interesting questions. And then one person, with the handle @RAPIST, started posting abusive comments. He then asked me where he could come to rape me using a condom," she said.

She says she decided to leave the chat after the abuse continued.

Ms Krishnan considers herself "thick skinned, used to addressing difficult questions and dealing with abuse", but this, she says, was "sexual harassment".

"What angered me was that Rediff didn't ensure that their guest was given a safe environment, the chat was not moderated nor was the abusive handle blocked."

Meena Kandasamy Meena Kandasamy chose to go to the police when she faced online abuse

Rediff did not respond to BBC's requests for an interview.

However, they posted an edited transcript of the chat on their website. The offensive posts had been removed and an apology made to Ms Krishnan.

More than 90 million Indians are active users of Facebook and Twitter and a large number of them are women. Cyber stalking and bullying of women are common.

Writer-activist Meena Kandasamy chose to go to the police when she faced sexist abuse online.

Last year, she had tweeted about a beef-eating festival at a university in the city of Hyderabad after which she was threatened with "live-telecasted gang-rape and being torched alive and acid attacks".

Hindus who regard cows as sacred had clashed with low-caste Dalit groups who had organised the event.

"On an average, I get about 30 to 50 abusive tweets on days when I am active on Twitter. During the beef festival, there were more than 800 tweets in a span of two to three hours," Ms Kandasamy says.
'Patriarchal'
She believes that many Indian men react to posts that are critical of "caste and of Hindu nationalism".

"I face the threat of violence even outside this virtual world in terms of people who don't like my writings, my politics. Copies of my books have been burnt. I feel that kind of pain is far more deep and real than anonymous trolls and threats," says Ms Kandasamy.

K Jaishankar, a teacher of criminology who has been studying bullying, stalking and defamation of women online, says India's "patriarchal mindset has pervaded the internet space".

"Men don't like women to talk back. Public personalities who express strong opinions are trolled in a bid to force them off line," he says.

Mr Jaishankar, who counsels victims of cyber crime along with his colleague and lawyer Debarati Haldar, says that Indian users online are largely male introverts who have found the web a place where they can express themselves freely and anonymously.

Kavita Krishnan Kavita Krishnan was attacked on an online chat

"These men could be respectable professionals such as doctors, lawyers or professors in real life but online, they tend to show a darker side."

Most of the women affected online do not go to the police, Ms Haldar says. Instead, they try to get the objectionable content removed, which is not usually easy.

India has a law - Section 66A of India's Information Technology [IT] Act - against sending inflammatory and indecent messages on the internet and in recent times it has been used by the state as a weapon against dissent.

But, Ms Haldar says, women facing cyber bullying of a sexual nature have not been able to convince the authorities to take action against their abusers under the law.

"In many instances, when I motivated the woman to go to the police, they came back and told me that their complaints were dismissed as trivial. Instead, the police told them that it was not necessary for women to give their opinion on social media."

Ms Haldar says the authorities must take these cases more seriously and charge the offenders under Section 66A of the IT law.

Even charging the offenders under the existing laws on sexual harassment could go a long way in curbing such abuse against women, she says.