Post a Comment Print Share on Facebook
Featured Pedro Sánchez Hamás Reino Unido PP Consejo de Ministros

The PP regrets the "setbacks" in the fight against gender violence and asks the Government to join forces

It also urges him to stop "building walls in Spanish society.

- 7 reads.

The PP regrets the "setbacks" in the fight against gender violence and asks the Government to join forces

It also urges him to stop "building walls in Spanish society."

MADRID, 25 Nov. (EUROPA PRESS) -

The PP has regretted the "setbacks" that have recently occurred in the fight against gender violence, blaming the Government for "breaking unity, ignoring warnings and implementing partisan policies" that it believes have had consequences. "disastrous."

In a manifesto released on the occasion of the commemoration of the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women on November 25, the PP claims to recover the spirit of unity among the majority of political parties and demands that the Government "stop building walls in Spanish society", which he considers "does not benefit this fight in any way".

In this sense, it has extended its hand to the Executive of Pedro Sánchez to join efforts together with the Autonomous Communities and the Spanish Federation of Municipalities and Provinces (FEMP), in addition to the Administration of Justice, associations and the Security Forces and Bodies of the State.

Likewise, he recalled the 1,205 rapists and pedophiles who have had their sentences reduced and the 121 sexual offenders released from prison as a result of the application of the Law of only yes means yes.

"There is no way to relax in this fight. We must continue to advance decisively in the eradication of violence against women in Spain and take advantage of the work done, because we are not starting from scratch. We have made important progress over the last decades, taking the best example in the great agreement that represented the State Pact against Gender Violence, promoted by the Government of Mariano Rajoy," the manifesto states.

The 'popular' defend that this pact "achieved unity, leaving out partisan interests and putting all attention and resources into caring for the victims."

He also assures that "something is wrong" after 52 women have been murdered by their partners or ex-partners in Spain so far this year, a figure that exceeds that of the previous three years. In total, since 2003, 1,237 women have been murdered, and since 2013, 428 children have been orphaned as a result.

Among the PP's proposals are raising greater awareness among young people, analyzing the media and perfecting the technology used to control sentences, examining the means of supporting victims and reinforcing them, providing more resources to the Care Units. of the Family and Women of the National Police and the Women-Children Teams of the Civil Guard, and evaluate and review the State Pact.