<p>Almost 1,000 women were murdered in Mexico in the first three months of this year, according to government data, showing a spike in violence that combined with <a href="http://www.deccanherald.com/tag/coronavirus" target="_blank">coronavirus</a> lockdown measures, advocates say, puts women in double jeopardy.</p>.<p>The rate was 8% higher than in the same period last year, according to the data.</p>.<p>"The deadliest pandemic for women in our country, more than the coronavirus, is feminicidal violence," said Congresswoman Martha Tagle from the opposition Citizens' Movement party.</p>.<p>"Today, violence is the greatest threat to all the rights for women that we have had recognized with great effort," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.</p>.<p>Some 14,000 confirmed cases of COVID-19 have been reported in Mexico, and more than 1,300 deaths, although testing rates are low. Of the coronavirus deaths, about 420 have been women, the government said.</p>.<p>The government reported that at least 720 women were murdered in the first quarter of the year and 244 women were victims of femicide, where a woman is killed because of her gender.</p>.<p>A year ago, at least 890 women were killed.</p>.<p>Gender-based violence is widespread in the Latin American country.</p>.<p>The national statistics agency (INEGI) has said two-thirds of women in Mexico have experienced some form of violence, with almost 44% suffering abuse from a partner.</p>.<p>The femicide rate has more than doubled in the past five years, and gang violence has pushed the murder tally to record heights. Most violent crime in Mexico goes unsolved.</p>.<p>With coronavirus lockdown measures extended until at least the end of May, advocates worry that such alarming rates of violence may get worse.</p>.<p>Calls and messages sent to the National Network of Shelters - a network of almost 70 refuges for female victims of violence - rose more than 80 percent between mid-March and mid-April when compared to the previous month.</p>.<p>"It's terrible. I think many more women could die because of violence than COVID in this period," said Patricia Olamendi, a lawyer who represents victims of violence and has written protocols on femicide investigations.</p>.<p>She added that the government has not published a plan to address the spike in domestic abuse.</p>.<p>"There is a complete and absolute abandonment," she said. "What's happening in the country is inhumane."</p>.<p>In a meeting last week regarding violence against women during the pandemic, Interior Minister Olga Sanchez Cordero said the country's 911 emergency hotline was key to battling the scourge.</p>.<p>"We must join efforts to face the pandemic of violence (against women) that is the silent pandemic, but also the one that causes pain (and) costs thousands of lives a year," she said.</p>.<p>The Interior Ministry did not immediately reply to a request for comment.</p>.<p>Protests against gendered violence grew earlier this year, with millions of Mexican women staying home from work during a nationwide strike in March, a day after a series of protests across the country for International Women’s Day.</p>.<p>Mexico suffered its worst year for homicides in 2019, with a record 34,582 victims, according to data published in January.</p>
<p>Almost 1,000 women were murdered in Mexico in the first three months of this year, according to government data, showing a spike in violence that combined with <a href="http://www.deccanherald.com/tag/coronavirus" target="_blank">coronavirus</a> lockdown measures, advocates say, puts women in double jeopardy.</p>.<p>The rate was 8% higher than in the same period last year, according to the data.</p>.<p>"The deadliest pandemic for women in our country, more than the coronavirus, is feminicidal violence," said Congresswoman Martha Tagle from the opposition Citizens' Movement party.</p>.<p>"Today, violence is the greatest threat to all the rights for women that we have had recognized with great effort," she told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.</p>.<p>Some 14,000 confirmed cases of COVID-19 have been reported in Mexico, and more than 1,300 deaths, although testing rates are low. Of the coronavirus deaths, about 420 have been women, the government said.</p>.<p>The government reported that at least 720 women were murdered in the first quarter of the year and 244 women were victims of femicide, where a woman is killed because of her gender.</p>.<p>A year ago, at least 890 women were killed.</p>.<p>Gender-based violence is widespread in the Latin American country.</p>.<p>The national statistics agency (INEGI) has said two-thirds of women in Mexico have experienced some form of violence, with almost 44% suffering abuse from a partner.</p>.<p>The femicide rate has more than doubled in the past five years, and gang violence has pushed the murder tally to record heights. Most violent crime in Mexico goes unsolved.</p>.<p>With coronavirus lockdown measures extended until at least the end of May, advocates worry that such alarming rates of violence may get worse.</p>.<p>Calls and messages sent to the National Network of Shelters - a network of almost 70 refuges for female victims of violence - rose more than 80 percent between mid-March and mid-April when compared to the previous month.</p>.<p>"It's terrible. I think many more women could die because of violence than COVID in this period," said Patricia Olamendi, a lawyer who represents victims of violence and has written protocols on femicide investigations.</p>.<p>She added that the government has not published a plan to address the spike in domestic abuse.</p>.<p>"There is a complete and absolute abandonment," she said. "What's happening in the country is inhumane."</p>.<p>In a meeting last week regarding violence against women during the pandemic, Interior Minister Olga Sanchez Cordero said the country's 911 emergency hotline was key to battling the scourge.</p>.<p>"We must join efforts to face the pandemic of violence (against women) that is the silent pandemic, but also the one that causes pain (and) costs thousands of lives a year," she said.</p>.<p>The Interior Ministry did not immediately reply to a request for comment.</p>.<p>Protests against gendered violence grew earlier this year, with millions of Mexican women staying home from work during a nationwide strike in March, a day after a series of protests across the country for International Women’s Day.</p>.<p>Mexico suffered its worst year for homicides in 2019, with a record 34,582 victims, according to data published in January.</p>