Indoor assaults dominate domestic violence in police region Mitt

Police in region Mitt report 992 indoor assault cases against women over 18 in relationships last year, compared to 152 outdoors. The pattern holds for men, though with lower numbers. Authorities urge greater awareness of crimes hidden behind closed doors.

Police in region Mitt note that more than five times as many assaults against women in relationships occur indoors than outdoors. Last year, 992 such cases against women over 18 were reported indoors in the region, versus 152 outdoors. Local figures mirror this: Västmanland 327 versus 50, Uppsala 367 versus 50, and Gävleborg 298 versus 52. For men over 18, numbers are lower but follow the same indoor pattern. Johanna Walterskog, operational coordinator for particularly vulnerable crime victims, states: «Assaults in relationships often happen behind closed doors and do not receive as much attention as violence in public spaces.» Efforts continue to highlight these hidden crimes, which rarely make headlines. «If someone is beaten at a bar and police respond, it often becomes a newspaper note, but if a woman is beaten by her husband at home, it does not get the same coverage,» Walterskog observes. She cites shame, fear, and economic dependency as reasons for the large dark figure. Violence includes physical, psychological, sexual, and economic forms. Police stress watching for signs like sudden isolation or neighbor noises and reporting suspicions.

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Dramatic illustration of a couple in a violent dispute in a Malmö apartment, with the man pulling the woman's hair and her wielding a knife-like object in response, police arriving outside.
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