Recognising behavioural signs is key to tackling domestic violence

Controlling behaviour can, in extreme cases, lead to murder

Recognising behavioural warning signs associated with domestic violence was identified as a key component to tackle the problem in the Women’s Aid report Photograph: Thinkstock
Recognising behavioural warning signs associated with domestic violence was identified as a key component to tackle the problem in the Women’s Aid report Photograph: Thinkstock

Recognising behavioural warning signs associated with domestic violence was identified as a key component to tackle the problem in the Women's Aid report.

A boyfriend or husband seeking to isolate his partner from her family and friends was one, undermining a woman’s confidence and sense of worth was another, controlling behaviour relating to money was yet another.

Each form of what is essentially controlling behaviour could eventually lead to domestic violence perpetrated against a woman – including her murder and, in the case of some extreme murder/suicides, the destruction of an entire family.

Scenarios relating to domestic violence were outlined at the launch of Behind Closed Doors: Femicide Watch 1996-2016. It found that over the period, 209 women and 16 children were killed by men, who were in most cases either current or former partners, and fathers of the children.

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Ireland now

Government Chief Whip

Regina Doherty

said the report was about Ireland now, not ancient history. The report’s final eight pages contain the names, age, date of death and type identity of the perpetrator, where known, of each of the 225 people killed.

“It is a reflection of Irish society that actually I find very disturbing,” said Doherty. “It’s shocking. It’s stark. And actually, I found myself thinking when I was reading, it’s revolting.”

In a panel discussion, one speaker said people repeatedly asked the wrong question in the wake of a revelation about domestic violence.

"Why does she stay?" Don Hennessy of the Cork Marriage Counselling Centre said was a common refrain. "It's always the wrong question. The real question is how does he get her to stay? You need to look at him and what he was about."

He said when a man who commits domestic violence closes his front door, he behaves at home like a psychopath . “They are not out of control but they concentrate all their psychopathetic on one human being.”

He said they are also sociopathic so they “lie to improve their position” and are always sexually dominant.

New approach

Det Supt

Michael Daly

, head of the newly established

Garda National Protective Services Bureau

which is spearheading a new approach to domestic violence, said the police were “going to think differently about how we deal with calls about domestic violence and how we respond”.

There would be fresh training so that a Garda first responder could carry out risk assessments for domestic violence . He said the key would be a multi-agency response with legal changes allowing gardaí to pursue suspects even if the victim declined to give evidence against the alleged perpetrator.

Journalist Brenda Power said her male readers tended to want to bestow absolution on perpetrators while women readers contacting her showed "a far greater awareness of the street angel/house devil phenomenon".

“They were all horrified at the acceptance of burying these women with their murderers as part of the denial.

They were disgusted at the willingness of these communities to perpetuate sort of ‘hail fellow, well met’ myth that these men had created.

She said society needed to “wake up to the fact that domestic violence is the sneakiest and most surreptitious crime and, astonishing as this may seem, collecting at Mass, and training the under 12s and buying your round doesn’t necessarily mean that you don’t go home and beat your wife.”

Peter Murtagh

Peter Murtagh

Peter Murtagh is a contributor to The Irish Times