The Ministry of Community Development has identified six types of abuse to which family members, or one of them, may be exposed as a result of improper application of the concept of guardianship, guardianship, authority or responsibility, warning against ignoring the rights of family members under protection, by pushing them to act in a way that negatively affects Their decisions.

She explained the types of abuse within the "Family Protection Policy" that I prepared as a reference document, which brings together in its axes legislation, protection and intervention mechanisms, in addition to studies, research and statistics related to protecting the family from any form of violence.

The policy included compulsion to leave the job and manipulation of the victim's financial resources, within violence and economic abuse. It also affirmed that the prevention of legal intercourse with the victim, as a mechanism for controlling her actions, is a form of sexual abuse that requires intervention and protection.

The policy enumerated forms of violence, which include: physical violence, verbal violence, psychological or moral violence, sexual violence, economic violence, and neglect (for the cause of harm and harm).

The policy described physical violence as any aggressive physical behavior that falls on a person before another, within the same family, or any of the physically harmful behaviors, or threatening them directly. Including, for example, beating, threatening to harm, or withholding physical needs.

She identified verbal violence as any abusive language used to discredit, embarrass, or threaten a victim. Including, for example, the use of ugly and inappropriate names, on the phones, and telling the victims that they are not desirable, as well as raging and screaming.

She defined psychological or moral violence as any behavior that exploits the victim’s weakness to confuse him and make him feel insecure. Including manipulating the victim's nerves, intimidation, attempting to control, criticism leading to undermining the victim's self-confidence, humiliation, threat, and refusal to speak.

The policy set out details of sexual abuse, which is any behavior that includes sexual abuse, whether verbal or physical. Among them, the use of force or coercion, manipulating the victim, forcing her to have sex, preventing legal intercourse with the victim, as a mechanism of control, and threatening the victim to publish or expose her images using social media or other different means of publication. As for economic violence, the policy stated that any behavior that involves manipulating the victim's economic resources. Such as not allowing her to obtain money, or limiting it in one way or another, and causing the victim to lose her job.

As for negligence, it indicated that the apparent failure in not meeting basic needs, material, psychological, health or educational, and not to take precautions and measures to prevent harm to family members, such as not to obtain identity papers, and not to follow life affairs, and to refrain from counseling and guidance .

Psychological violence

It is no behavior

Double exploits

The victim to notify him

Insecure.