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Between January and April 2026, the Kurdistan Region recorded:
In 2025, the total reached 611 cases, a 14% increase from 2024, suggesting a steady upward trend rather than an anomaly.
Officials and civil society groups link this rise to economic pressure, delayed salaries, household stress, and growing social tension inside families.
A five-year analytical study by Iraq’s Ministry of Interior (2019–2023), along with 2024 monitoring data, confirms that domestic violence is not only increasing but also structurally underreported—especially in the case of male victims.
Key findings include:
Officials described these numbers as “modest” relative to Iraq’s population of roughly 44 million—but acknowledged they only represent reported cases, not the full scope.
The most consistent pattern across both Kurdistan and Iraq-wide research is not just violence itself—but silence.
Men are significantly less likely to report abuse due to:
The Ministry of Interior study explicitly notes that cultural norms discourage men from acknowledging victimhood, reinforcing a cycle where abuse remains hidden, unresolved, and often escalatory.
One widely reported case illustrates the complexity behind male victimization in Iraq.
Hassan, a 40-year-old man from Babil governorate, described how his life changed after being diagnosed with cancer:
“As my condition worsened, my wife asked me to transfer ownership of our house and car to her… I agreed out of compassion.”
He later reported worsening neglect, restricted movement, threats of divorce, and eventually physical violence, leading to him being forced out of his home.
While such cases are not statistically dominant, they highlight how domestic violence against men can include economic control, psychological coercion, and physical abuse, often occurring in private and unreported.
Across both Kurdistan and Iraq-wide studies, researchers and officials identify overlapping drivers:
Civil society figures also point to additional risk factors such as drug abuse, infidelity disputes, and psychological disorders, which can escalate household conflict in both directions.
A representative from the Association for the Protection and Development of the Iraqi Family noted that younger men—particularly under 30—appear increasingly vulnerable due to psychological stress and lack of emotional support systems.
Despite rising cases, Iraq still lacks a fully implemented Domestic Violence Law.
A draft law approved by the government in 2020 remains stalled in parliament due to political and ideological resistance. Critics argue it is influenced by external norms, while supporters say it is necessary to address a growing crisis.
Legal experts highlight a deeper structural issue:
Lawyers also warn that even when cases are reported, social pressure often discourages men from pursuing court proceedings, reinforcing underreporting.
While women remain the majority of reported domestic violence victims, the emerging data shows a parallel reality:
This creates a structural imbalance: violence is measured, but not fully seen.
The Kurdistan Region’s early 2026 figures—186 complaints in under four months—do not exist in isolation. They reflect a broader Iraqi pattern of:
The combination of rising numbers and persistent silence suggests not just a reporting increase—but a deepening structural strain inside family systems.
If current trends continue, Iraq and Kurdistan may face a widening gap between:
The most concerning element is not only the rise in incidents, but the lack of visibility and institutional readiness to address male victimization as part of the broader domestic violence framework.
Without legal reform, economic stabilization, and mental health infrastructure, experts warn the issue risks remaining a silent crisis absorbed inside households rather than addressed in public policy.
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