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But after six months she moved back in with him and they had been living together for a year when she disappeared. The couple argued, they say, because Fuentes had gotten another woman pregnant. Garrido told the police that her daughter used to call her every evening. At 11 p. According to the autopsy report, she was still alive when she was doused with gasoline and set alight. With one woman killed every 12 hours, Guatemala has the fourth highest femicide rate in the world and is also the country with the highest number of femicide s committed by firearm, according to a report published by the Geneva Declaration Secretariat.
Most of the judges who hear the cases are women who receive training in gender issues. The courts also employ a psychologist and a social worker and have daycare facilities to look after children while their mothers testify so child care does not prevent their participation in trials. However, Wichita State University professor Dinorah Azpuru , who was part of a team that conducted a Americas Barometer survey that included violence against women , points out that some socially entrenched attitudes, such as the acceptability of beating a partner on the grounds of suspected infidelity, pose challenges.
Bearing in mind that some of the countries with the highest femicide rates in the world are located in Latin America, Vanderbilt University included attitudes towards violence against women in its Americas Barometer survey. It identifies Guatemala as the country in Latin America with the highest tolerance of violence against women suspected of infidelity, with 58 percent of those surveyed saying they regarded infidelity as a justification for violence, followed by 42 percent of Salvadorans, 35 percent of Guyanese and 34 percent of Mexicans.
Guatemala n women, found the survey, are just as likely to justify violence on the grounds of infidelity and double standards are deeply ingrained as men who cheat are not shunned or ostracized by society. The Americas Barometer survey also shatters the widespread belief that domestic violence is rife in slums and impoverished rural villages but rare among the affluent and better educated. The data indicate that education does not have a significant impact on attitudes — either male and female—towards violence and infidelity.