Ms. Sun also addressed issues brought up by Mr. Sylvia Lim ( Workers’ Party – Aljunied ) regarding whether offenders who commit arrestable offenses will only be dealt with under the Women’s Charter,” inadvertently downgrading the seriousness” of the incident.
If there are private violence offenses that can be arrested, Ms. Sun stated that the police would continue to deal with them as usual. The police may work with a domestic violence emergency response team to listen to high-risk family violence conditions.
According to her, the police will continue to deal with situations involving law and order violations, while members of the emergency response team will address immediate health problems and direct people to shelter professional centers for follow-up treatments.
Digital DISPLAYING
Protectors may also file a courtroom application for electric monitoring, which may include e-tagging.
According to Ms. Sun, this will be used against high-risk perpetrators in extraordinary circumstances where there is a fair fear that the PPO has been violated and the survivor has certainly taken precautions to protect themselves.
E-tagging has been used for suspects who have been granted parole, and MSF even employs it on probationers.
According to Ms. Sun,” through e-tagging, the authorities may be alerted if, for instance, a perpetrator who has been ordered by the Domestic Exclusion Order against him or her enters the survivor’s house, so action may be taken immediately.”
REMOVING Properties ‘ Victims
The amendments give protectors the option to petition the court to eliminate survivors from their home as a last resort and in the event that all other options have failed. & nbsp,
At the same time, the judge is required to issue either a Supervision Order, an Order of Care, or both.
A Care Order places the victim in the custody of a healthy individual. A keeper or another suitable man chosen by the court temporarily takes charge of the victim under the guidance of a Supervision Order. & nbsp,