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    One in three EU women face violence, most cases unreported, survey finds

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    By Charlotte Van Campenhout

    BRUSSELS, ‌March 3 (Reuters) - Physical and sexual violence affects roughly a ​third of women in the European Union during their lifetime,  but most incidents go unreported, a ⁠survey revealed on Tuesday.

    The results of the survey, conducted by the EU Agency for Fundamental Rights (FRA) and the European Institute for Gender Equality, showed that ​only 11.3% of women reported physical or sexual abuse by non-partners to the police, and just ‌6.1% reported violence by intimate partners.

    Common reasons for not reporting violence included shame, self-blame, fear, and distrust in law enforcement. Limited awareness or access to support services ⁠also emerged as contributing factors.

    About 30.7% of women across the ⁠bloc said they had experienced violence, a slight decrease from the 33% recorded in the first such survey in 2012. The study also highlighted other widespread forms of abuse, including psychological, economic, and online abuse.

    "Violence against women is a ‌fundamental rights violation," FRA Director Sirpa Rautio said. "Member states have clear obligations to ⁠prevent violence, protect victims and ensure access to justice, ‌and these findings show there is still urgent ​work to do."

    'NORDIC PARADOX'

    Prevalence rates varied significantly, ranging from 57.1% in Finland to 11.9% in Bulgaria.

    Finland's Nordic neighbours, known for high gender equality,  also showed ‌high levels of violence, with 52.5% of women in ​Sweden and 47.5% in Denmark ⁠experiencing violence, while lower-equality countries to the south show more complex ‌reporting dynamics.

    This disparity, termed the "Nordic paradox", could ⁠reflect actual variations in women's experiences or contrasting reporting behaviors and different perceptions of violence related to sexual encounters between countries, according to researchers.

    FRA's first survey ​on violence against women in ‌the EU in 2012 showed the same paradox. 

    The new study drew on interviews ⁠with nearly 115,000 women aged 18 ​to 74 carried out between September 2020 and March 2024.

    (Reporting by Charlotte ​Van Campenhout, edititng by Andrei Khalip)

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