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Giulia Cecchettin’s Murder Snowballs Into A Nationwide Protest Against Italy’s Patriarchal Culture

Giulia Cecchettin’s Murder Snowballs Into A Nationwide Protest Against Italy’s Patriarchal Culture

Giulia Cecchettin

The tragic death of a young woman, Giulia Cecchettin in Italy, allegedly at the hands of her possessive ex-boyfriend, has deeply saddened the nation and sparked conversations about violence against women.

How did Giulia Cecchettin Die?

On November 11, just days before her anticipated graduation with a biomedical engineering degree, 22-year-old Giulia Cecchettin went shopping for her graduation outfit with her ex-boyfriend, Filippo Turetta. The couple then disappeared, and later CCTV footage revealed distressing moments leading to Cecchettin’s demise.

Turetta, 22, was captured on camera assaulting Cecchettin in a parking lot near her home in Vigonovo, near Venice. Authorities say he subdued her with duct tape, forced her into his car, and took her to an industrial area where the assault continued. 

After an extensive search, Cecchettin’s lifeless body was found on November 18, covered in black plastic bags in a ditch, showing signs of a brutal murder with over 20 deep stab wounds on her head and neck.

An international arrest warrant was issued for Turetta, who was later arrested in Germany. The incident has prompted an outpouring of grief and anger in Italy, with calls for action against pervasive patriarchal attitudes.

Giulia Cecchettin's Murder

Giulia Cecchettin’s Death and Protest

Giulia Cecchettin’s tragic death has led to protests and vigils across Italy, drawing attention to the alarming number of women facing violence. Demonstrations are planned for the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women.

Data from the Italian Interior Ministry reveals that 106 women have been killed in Italy this year, with 55 allegedly by a partner or ex-partner. The incident has ignited a heightened awareness of gender-based violence, leading to a surge in calls to Italy’s anti-violence hotline.

Elisa Ercoli, director of Differenza Donna, an organization fighting gender-based violence, highlighted the urgent need for change in Italy’s patriarchal culture. Turetta and Cecchettin had studied the same subject, but Cecchettin was set to graduate first, symbolizing a potential source of resentment.

Italy’s first female prime minister, Giorgia Meloni, also expressed outrage and pledged an educational campaign to combat misogynistic violence in schools. The Italian Senate approved new legislation to strengthen measures against gender violence, including stricter restraining orders.

Despite these efforts, critics argue that more needs to be done to address Italy’s entrenched problem of gender-based violence because the women there do not receive adequate protection of their rights by the authorities. 

Giulia Cecchettin's Murder

Giulia’s case sparks up the initial anger Italian women expressed concerning the case of the 17-year-old student who got harassed by her school’s janitor on April 12, 2022. The perpetrator had been released by the court, because according to the judge, “the act does not constitute a crime”. The incident had lasted less than ten seconds and there was no subjective intent initially to carry out a crime. 

In summary, the man was acquitted because he performed the action publicly and suddenly. Since it wasn’t premeditated, and his motive had been to joke with the student, his putting his hand under her panties to grope her for less than ten seconds was not a crime. 

The young girl’s story and Giulia’s death are one of the many cases of hate crimes against women by men living in Italy. A nationwide protest has been going on for days to reform the laws that protect women in the state. 

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While murder against women is theoretically supposed to be punished by law for 21 years in Italy, many women have been speaking up since Giulia’s death about how most of the victim’s assailants get released after 8 to 10 years of their sentencing. 

The patriarchal culture that doesn’t allow men to get punished well enough after committing hate crimes against women is why women all over the country have come together to say ‘Enough is enough’ to femicide and sexual violence against women.

Giulia Cecchettin's Murder

Tributes And Mourning of Giulia Cecchettin Nationwide

Giulia’s tragic incident has ignited hope for a profound societal change, with Cecchettin’s sister emphasizing the responsibility of men to challenge harmful behaviors.

In memory of Giulia Cecchettin, schools held a minute’s silence, but at the University of Padua where Giulia studied before her death, students chose not to remain silent, instead expressing their refusal to accept such violence through applause, poetry reading, and singing.

For a country like Italy where at least one woman is killed every three days on average, marking the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women on November 25, 2023, was more than just a ritual. It was a cry and a shout for societal reforms.  

All images are sourced from twitter

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