The Baiona Attorney General, Jerome Bourrier, gave details on Sunday at the hearing which aroused the interest of the press. He says it's been a "feminicide," and he's given some details of the moment they found the body: he had ankles and wrists attached, a big injury with a hammer in his head and signs of being raped. Details of the autopsy will be given this Monday.
Attorney Bourrier said that the same woman was found on Friday at the Hotel Paris in San Juan de Luz with signs of violence and that in mid-April she descended from the window of a hotel in Ziburu. It fell or was shot down from the fifth floor, official sources say it is not yet. The 34-year-old woman arrived at the hospital in death and at the same time a 37-year-old male was arrested, who was his partner and had a history of male violence, but was released because, according to the prosecutor, the woman had a "tendency to suicide", in particular "psychiatric history and suicidal tendencies". However, the hypothesis of the attempted murder also continued.
The doctors had the woman in artificial coma, but they managed to stabilize her and keep her alive. On 1 May it accidentally disappears from the hospital. The hospital officials told the police but failed to locate him. Until last Friday, May 3, he appears dead at the Paris hotel of San Juan de Luz. The man has been there those days and he himself called the police.
Affected man
As Naiz has gathered, since January the French police had gathered a 37-year-old man. He had a background, but he was never convicted of sexist violence because there was not enough evidence.
Concentrations these days
To denounce the murder, the feminist movement of Iparralde has called for a mobilization this Monday in San Juan de Luz, Plaza Luis XIV at 19:00. They will also protest in the capitals of Hego Euskal Herria.
Bi erizainetatik batek lanean eraso sexistak jasaten dituela azalerazi du Erizainen Ordenak joan den urte bukaeran egin ikerketak. 21.000 erizainek ihardetsi dute, sektore pribatu, publiko eta liberaletik. Hauetan 2.500 gizonak dira.
Today, the voices of women and children remain within a culture that delegitimizes their voices, silencing their experiences, within a system aimed at minimizing or ignoring their basic rights and needs. A media example of this problem is the case of Juana Rivas, but her story... [+]