20
May
2026
Watch
Rights, support and protection of victims of crime (debate)
Madam President, ladies and gentlemen, Celeste is 12 years old and has seen her father beat her mother many times. He struggles to sleep and concentrate and tends to isolate himself. Children are victims of domestic violence both when they are directly affected and when they witness violence against a parent. The latter is called "assisted violence", but it is just violence. In Italy, the latest Istat data show that almost eight out of ten children witness the violence suffered by the mother, children who grow up in fear, hyperallergic and guilt, who develop anxiety, depression or aggression. For this reason, the revision of the Victims Directive marks an important step: finally recognises specific assistance and protection services for child witnesses to crime and for orphans of femicide, so as to prevent a second traumatisation through integrated, coordinated and accessible services in the same place. The guiding principle is enshrined in Article 24 of our Charter of Fundamental Rights, the primacy of the best interests of the child, because a truly caring community recognises that protecting children means prevention, avoiding harm to their development and breaking the intergenerational transmission of violence.