“The perpetrator’s statement that ‘his reputation will be tarnished’ through the publication [of his name] is ridiculous,” the attorneys said. “We that he creates a” new reputation “that will serve him on the criminal walls. The days for the suspect will soon end.
In reaction to this decision, several women’s and American teams have published the call and symbol of the man online.
“The opinion to approve the sentence to settle for the killer’s request and not the victim’s request!The sentence to pass insists on protecting the reputation of a murder suspect who was caught with a roller and knife after stabbing his wife 20 times !wrote Lily Ben Ami, the sister of Michal Sela who was murdered through her husband last year.
Ben Ami named the suspect in his social media post.
Bracha Barad, of the feminist organization Kulan, tweeted the man several times, with a follow-up message: “I saved you from having to move to Facebook to verify. “
Hagit Pe’er, director of the Na’amat women’s advocacy group, asked police to appeal the judge’s decision, saying she was sending a damaging message to victims of domestic violence.
“It is an unreasonable resolution that sends all the wrong messages. The judge’s message to women victims of violence is that they will have to remain silent and not show the “good reputation”of those who abuse them,” Pe’er told the public broadcaster. Kan.
Shira, 31, underwent emergency surgery at Soroka Medical Center in Beersheba after being stabbed by her husband on 18 September.
Police arrived at the site after neighbors reported hearing screams and found her injured in the couple’s house.
Her husband, a 45-year-old electrical engineer working in the defense industry, was arrested.
According to Ynet, Shira thanked her neighbors for intervening and saving her life, and described to her circle of family members and police investigators how her husband allegedly stabbed her and asked, “Why did you do that?”
A witness told the Twelfth News Channel that he ran to the couple’s house after hearing the screams and seeing the bloodied husband, still holding the knife.
“I begged him. I said, “Please don’t kill her, don’t kill her, ” said the witness.
Police said they had a history of the couple following a domestic violence incident past in 2019. The woman’s brother claimed that she filed a complaint, which she then withdrew, after their respective families intervened and led them to reconcile.
“In retrospect, it was a big mistake,” he said.
Police and social services organizations have reported a significant increase in domestic violence court cases since the onset of the coronavirus crisis.
In June, thousands of Israelis gathered at a demonstration in Tel Aviv to call for government action to end violence against women, at such a time in less than a month.
The demonstration took a position when the Ministry of Social Welfare and Social Services published figures that looked like an 112 consistent with the accumulation of pennies in the number of domestic violence court cases it won in its hotline from May to April.