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Remembering the Amarillo Police Officers We Lost Last Year

Remembering the Amarillo Police Officers We Lost Last Year

Supported by UN Women, police forces are becoming more responsive to survivors of violence

Date: Thursday, July 15, 2021 Two female police officers of Dhaka Metropolitan Police patrolling streets in Dhaka, Bangladesh. The visible presence of female police officers makes women feel safer. Taken on 3 June 2020. Photo: UN Women/Fahad Abdullah Kaizer In the past 18 months, by trapping women with their abusers, COVID-19 pandemic lockdowns have worsened the already-widespread violence against women while preventing many of them from getting help. But even those who do manage to contact the police come up against another long-standing challenge: a culture and system that treats the survivor as a big part of the problem. “The biggest challenge we face is that women do not report cases of violence because of victim-blaming attitudes by police officers,” says Police Superintendent Maria Mahmood, Director at the National Police Academy in Pakistan. “When I started working as a police officer, I was shocked to see the deep-rooted bias of a patriarchal police forc

Supported by UN Women, police forces are becoming more responsive to survivors of violence

Supported by UN Women, police forces are becoming more responsive to survivors of violence
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