Local view for "http://purl.org/linkedpolitics/eu/plenary/2009-11-26-Speech-4-172"
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"en.20091126.18.4-172"2
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"As we mark the 10th anniversary of the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women, it has to be said that the preventive measures which have been implemented with this purpose in mind have not achieved the expected results. How can we explain this phenomenon? Judging from the debates which have been held in this Chamber, we can put a label on it: gender inequality.
If this inequality was the fundamental cause of this phenomenon, countries in northern Europe, which are renowned for their very progressive culture and customs, ought to have the best results. In fact, this is not the case; if anything, it is the opposite. According to the Norwegian daily newspaper
6% of young women in Sweden aged between 15 and 25 have been raped in one year.
Courage is required to be able to say that the rise in acts of violence against women has coincided with the mass arrival of immigrants from outside Europe whose culture and traditions are totally opposite to ours. The burkha, forced marriages, polygamy, female genital mutilation, honour crimes and other forms of behaviour from another era are unacceptable.
It therefore makes it absolutely absurd to continue to encourage this immigration while wanting to combat violence against women."@en1
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"Aftenposten"1
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