Oh so this is the article my friend was banging on about on FB. Will just copy and paste my comment there. Do not have energy for this.
It's not that the 13 (or 19) male victims don't matter, of course, OF COURSE they matter just as much as female victims. But domestic violence is an EXTREMELY gendered issue, and it matters because it affects both perception and reality. Women's refuges are losing funding drastically, many have had to close. Outreach services which support women outside of the refuges are closing. Others (refuge and outreach) are being threatened because they don't take in male victims - these refuges which were set up and fought tooth and nail, by women, for women, in a time where relationship violence was seen as inevitable, and women didn't have as much political power as they have today. There are male refuges, and they stand empty, save for a few residents - of course nobody is arguing that they are unnecessary, but to devote more space to men (who typically have very different needs, and entirely different patterns of response to abusive relationships) and take it away from women while women are being turned away because there aren't enough spaces.... I can't. It is a tragedy and a failing on a massive scale, and that is why the focus on women.
I also felt that article was the same as what SPB is saying, TBH.
Also I did not include this because it was relating only to the comment made, but this makes for interesting reading. In particular:
All but one of the female partner/ex-partner homicide victims were killed by a male suspect, whereas among men, around a third of partner/ex-partner homicide were killed by a male suspect. However, the category of partner/ex partner homicide includes homicides committed by the victim’s lover’s spouse or emotional rival (see definition above) and this was the case in the majority (14 out of 19) of these instances.
(Definition above: An emotional rival is defined as those instances where two persons come to know or meet each other through their association or knowledge of a third person, and where their emotional or sexual interest in this third person brings them into direct conflict with each other.)
Wording is confusing, but basically it means 14 out of 19, or 75% (not really a large enough sample to be consistent, but fuck, 75%) were not cases of DV at all, but just somebody who is vaguely related to the victim's partner.