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Phone app allows Gaza women to report domestic abuse anonymously

Domestic abuse. STOCK PHOTO

 A phone app that allows women in the Palestinian Gaza Strip to report domestic abuse anonymously is allowing growing numbers of victims to seek help while avoiding the shame and reprisals that put many off going to the authorities directly.

The “Masahatuna” or “Our Spaces” app was developed by local computer engineer Alaa Huthut, who saw the need for a way to seek advice safely in a society where family pressures keep much domestic violence hidden out of sight.

“Privacy was very important as fear is usually the main cause women don’t contact or visit centers,” she told Reuters.

The app allows women to register with the service without giving their names or leaving a trace of their contacts with care centers on their own phones.

“If anyone looks at the phone they wouldn’t know she made contact,” Huthut said.

Gaza, run by the Islamist Hamas group, is home to some 2.3 million people, nearly half of them women, according to Palestinian records.

In 2019, the Palestinian Bureau of Statistics said 41% of women in Gaza had faced domestic violence and women’s groups say that, as in many other countries, the problem worsened during coronavirus lockdowns.

“I faced verbal and physical violence for many years,” said a Gaza woman, 28, who asked not to be named. Following her divorce two years ago, the woman said she faced threats from her former husband and his family who threatened to take her 7-year old son away.

Kholoud Al-Sawalma of the Gaza Community Media Center said 355 women had downloaded the app and 160 had contacted help centers that provide psychological and legal support.

Last month, a Gaza court handed down the death penalty to a man who beat his wife to death. But women’s groups say more needs to be done to stop domestic violence in Gaza, where they say some women who report abuse at times get directed to clan leaders to resolve it.

In some cases where women have died due to abuse, some men may try to escape severe punishment by accusing their partners of adultery or fake mental health problems, law advocates said.

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