Mission

Non-Profit, 501(c)(3)

Mission:
The Dragonfly Centre is committed to the elimination of domestic violence against women and their children by providing victim friendly services that promotes the empowerment of survivors; through advocacy, public awareness and education and community based initiatives.

Vision: The Dragonfly Centre envisions a world free of violence against women and their children and social justice for all. We are founded on the vision and belief that every person has the right to live in a safe environment free from violence and the fear of violence and strive to work collaboratively with the community to provide victim friendly services to support domestic violence victims, survivors to the stage of thriving.

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Sunday, June 22, 2014

Mayaro Mom Hacked to Death

Worthless protection order

By Carolyn Kissoon

The domestic violence protection order granted to Mayaro mother of two, Orpha Hackett, proved worthless on Monday when she was hacked to death by a man she once loved.

Hackett, 23, was repeatedly stabbed and chopped on the head, neck and chest at her sister’s home around 2 pm.

She had earlier secured a three-year restraining order against the man at the Mayaro Magistrates’ Court.

Police believe the 29-year-old suspect followed Hackett to the home of her sister, Jinelle West, at St Ann’s Village, Mayaro where he attacked Hackett, a security guard, outside the house.

Police said she attempted to escape by running through some bushes, but the man chased and grabbed her. He was armed with a knife and cutlass. Hackett’s screams alerted neighbours who rushed to her assistance.

Police said the man pushed the bleeding woman to the ground and began running. A vigilante group however chased and captured him a half mile away in the bushes. He was beaten and restrained until officers arrived.

Relatives said Hackett, who lived at Oilfield Road, Union Village, Mayaro, recently ended an abusive relationship with the suspect. She was the mother of a four-year-old girl and two-year-old boy.
Police said the man was seen buying two knives and a cutlass before the attack.

Hackett was taken to the Mayaro District Hospital where she was pronounced dead on arrival.

The body was removed to the Forensic Science Centre in St James. An autopsy performed by pathologist Dr Valery Alexandrov found that Hackett was severely chopped on the right side of the head. Alexandrov said the chop wounds were dealt with “great force” causing severe injury to the brain. He said Hackett tried to defend herself as there were cuts to her hands. 
 
Source:http://www.trinidadexpress.com/news/Worthless-protection-order--Mayaro-mom--hacked-to-death-263583161.html

Paper Does Not Ensure Safety

 



Story Updated: Jun 18, 2014 at 12:08 AM ECT
 
A restraining order or order of protection is simply a document that requires a person to do, or to refrain from doing, certain acts.
 
The piece of paper does not ensure a person’s safety. It is up to that person to have a plan of action and to know what should be done when that protection order is breached. This is according to the Rape Crisis Centre and the Coalition Against Domestic Violence.

The Centre was responding to the death of Mayaro mother of two, Orpha Hackett, who was stabbed and chopped to death hours after getting a protection order against a man on Monday.

Amanda Ackbarali-Ramdial, a counsellor at the Rape Crisis Society, said women seek to have protective orders when the abuse becomes so severe that they are afraid for their lives.

She said women need to have a plan. “You need to be looking for a place to stay that is safe and unknown to the perpetrator. A place that is different, where he cannot find you,” she said.

Ackbarali-Ramdial said women need to become aware of the agencies available. She advised that women granted protection orders should discuss the situation with relatives. “The relatives need to be made aware of what is happening. They should be able to assist the woman by ensuring that the man is not allowed to enter the compound at anytime,” she said.

Siobhan Burroughs, a clinical psychologist at the c entre, said there were many agencies throughout Trinidad and Tobago to assist women in abusive relationships.

“As I am aware there are more agencies available than before which are quite effective. I am not sure if the public is well informed about safe houses and how they work. There are women who are concerned about going to safe houses because they are not sure if their children can be with them,” she said.

Burroughs said these centres provided a therapeutic and relaxing environment for women to “clear their heads” and help them think forward.

Ackbarali-Ramdial said women need to be educated on the red flags in a relationship because “an abusive relationship does not start overnight”.

“Things like when a man raises his voice, or becomes angry or controlling behaviour. All of these are signs,” she said.

Ackbharali-Ramdial said communities need to work together to protect citizens against domestic violence.

“We need to move away from saying that it is their private business. We need to get back to taking care of each other before it gets to this point,” she said.

Burroughs said the Rape Crisis Centre and the Coalition Against Domestic Violence also provide assistance to perpetrators who admit that they are abusers.

—Carolyn Kissoon 
 
Source: http://www.trinidadexpress.com/news/263582961.html

Tuesday, June 17, 2014

The question can make all the difference

By Leigh Hofheimer

Just imagine you are sitting in your doctor’s office waiting for the doctor and chatting with the medical assistant. Maybe it’s your yearly physical or maybe this is your first visit and you just want antibiotics for a relentless chest cold. All of a sudden she starts running through this list of questions:
  • Have you ever been emotionally or physically abused by your partner or someone important to you?
  • Within the last year, have you been hit, slapped, kicked or otherwise physically hurt by someone? If YES, who? Husband, Ex-Husband, Boyfriend, Stranger, Other? Total number of times?
  • Since you’ve been pregnant, have you been slapped, kicked or otherwise physically hurt by someone? If YES, who? Husband, Ex-Husband, Boyfriend, Stranger, Other? Total number of times?
reproductive-coersion-flyerI would probably answer “no” to all of these questions even if I was experiencing abuse. It is so alienating to boil down the complexities of any relationship to these questions. And besides after I answer these questions, what happens? Where does this information go? Will you look at me differently? Judge me and my partner? Do you have any help to offer if I take a risk and tell you anything?

Current healthcare research shows that both finding the right way to ask and connecting a patient to resources is the two-step golden ticket for effective support.

Offering support starts with showing you have some idea about what living in a coercive and abusive relationship might feel like. Futures Without Violence offers a Safety Card with these questions:
Ask yourself: Are you in a healthy relationship?
  • Is my partner willing to communicate openly when there are problems?
  • Does my partner give me space to spend time with other people?
  • Is my partner kind and supportive?
If you answered YES to these questions, it is likely that you are in a healthy relationship. Studies show that this kind of relationship leads to better physical and mental health, longer life, and better outcomes for your children.
Ask yourself: Are you in an unhealthy relationship?
  • Does my partner shame me or humiliate me in front of others or in private?
  • Does my partner control where I go, who I talk to, and how I spend money?
  • Has my partner hurt or threatened me, or forced me to have sex?
If you answered YES to any of these questions, your health and safety may be in danger.

Their information also includes national hotline resources and where to get advocacy services.

I may still hesitate to answer these questions, but I know that the person in front of me is ready to have a deeper conversation and has some resources. Screening for, asking about, or listening for abuse in a relationship is not an end in itself. Providing support and connection is what survivors tell us they want.

If healthcare professionals really want to help, they have to take the time to learn the right questions and get comfortable connecting their patients to advocacy services. Consider helping by taking a stack of Safety Cards (they’re free) to your next doctor’s appointment.

Source: http://canyourelate.org/2014/06/03/the-question-can-make-all-the-difference/

Yes, All Men

Sunday, June 15, 2014

Let’s call cases what they are: Domestic violence

June 4, 2014

Each day in the United States, three women are murdered by intimate partners — husbands, boyfriends and exes.

America has the highest rate of domestic violence homicide of any industrialized country. In one year, 12.7 million people are physically abused, raped or stalked by their partners. That’s approximately the population of New York and Los Angeles combined — or 24 people every minute.
We know this all too well in Pierce County, where any person on the street can likely recall a publicized case of a domestic violence homicide. What we don’t know is how to call this epidemic what it is, every single time.

In May alone, people died in our communities as a result of domestic violence. One woman escaped this certain fate with the help of a convenience store clerk — four others did not. One woman was severely injured; one perpetrator took his own life, leaving his two children orphaned and scarred unimaginably.

On the heels of yet another mass shooting specifically linked to misogyny, it is inexplicable to think that there is still minimizing or justifying of gender-based violence. While many people of all genders, orientations and walks of life experience domestic violence, the single largest risk factor is being female or perceived as effeminate.

And yet none of the stories this past month were initially reported as what they are — domestic violence. When the language we use to describe these crimes focuses on the assailant’s height, the notorious neighborhood or the perpetrator’s audacity to kick the police dog (he did, after all, just set another human being on fire), then we are really missing the point.

This matters because it is easy to distance ourselves from things we think don’t impact us personally.
Believing that mental illness causes such violence leads us to think we don’t have to worry if we don’t associate with the mentally ill. Believing that it’s just another crime in a historically high-crime area leads us to think that we can avoid harm if we don’t live in that kind of neighborhood, or that it’s a problem that only affects “those people.”

Believing that domestic violence is not preventable leads us to believe that we are powerless to change this problem whose repercussions reach into future generations and cost us all billions of dollars annually.

In each case reported in May, there was a pattern, a history and knowledge that someone’s safety was at risk. Each report is an opportunity to name domestic violence for what it is, to share resources, and have conversations that create space for thought and action.

In the time it took to read this, 100 more people were abused. You will very likely encounter one of those people, or be one yourself. Naming what’s happening and knowing how to get help could literally be the difference between life and death.

Karin White is deputy director of the YWCA Pierce County and has worked in the field of victims’ services for 15 years.

Source: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2014/06/04/3226613/lets-call-cases-what-they-are.html?sp=%2F99%2F447%2F

Read more here: http://www.thenewstribune.com/2014/06/04/3226613/lets-call-cases-what-they-are.html?sp=%2F99%2F447%2F#storylink=cpy