Demonstrations across the country come after 19 women were killed by their partners

This article is more than 1 year old

This article is more than 1 year old

Protesters took to the streets of more than 250 towns and cities across Spain on Friday night to declare a “feminist emergency” after a series of high-profile rape cases and a summer in which 19 women were murdered by current or former partners.

Organisers urged participants to “turn the night purple” – the colour of the feminist movement – to raise the alarm and protest against apathy, indifference and a lack of attention from politicians and the media.

By 8pm, people were massing for demonstrations in cities including Madrid, Barcelona, Valencia, Bilbao, Tarragona, Salamanca, Seville and Alicante.

So far this year, 42 women have been murdered in domestic violence attacks and 32 children left motherless. Since the government began recording such murders in 2003, 1,017 women have been killed by their current or former partners.

The demonstrations come three years after the notorious gang-rape of a woman at the running of the bulls festival in Pamplona and amid the trial of seven men accused of raping a 14-year-old girl in Catalonia.

“This has been a summer dominated by barbarity, murders, rapes, assault, paedophilia and gang attacks,” said the protests’ organisers, Feminist Emergency.

“The gender-based violence of the summer has led to the worst figures in more than a decade. We can’t let another school or parliamentary term begin as if nothing has happened. To do so would be to tolerate the intolerable … This is an emergency.”

The organisers called on people to assemble with candles, lanterns, torches and mobile phones to let “feminism fill the night”.

Pedro Sánchez (@sanchezcastejon) Hoy, la noche será violeta. 💜



Las calles de nuestro país se llenan de luz contra la #ViolenciaMachista. Porque el compromiso de la sociedad española es firme: frente a la violencia contra las mujeres, ni un paso atrás. #20S #NocheVioleta #LuzVioleta #20SEmergenciaFeminista

Spain’s acting prime minister, socialist party leader Pedro Sánchez, tweeted his support for Friday’s protests.

“Tonight will be purple,” he said. “The streets of our country will fill with light against sexist violence because Spanish society’s commitment is firm: when it comes to violence against women, not a single step backwards.”

The Pamplona attack – known as the “wolf pack” case after the name the rapists gave themselves – shocked Spain and provoked a fierce debate over the country’s sexual offences legislation.

There were furious protests around the country after the judges presiding over the original trial cleared the five of gang-rape and convicted them only of the lesser charge of sexual abuse.

Facebook Twitter Pinterest Women protest in the rain at the Puerta del Sol square in Madrid. Photograph: Óscar del Pozo/AFP/Getty Images

In June, Spain’s supreme court overturned the regional court’s verdict, ruled that the men had committed rape, and raised their sentences from nine to 15 years each.

Parallels have been drawn between that case and the trial of the six men who are alleged to have raped a 14-year-old girl in the Catalan town of Manresa.

While prosecutors had initially argued the defendants should face charges of sexual assault rather than rape because the girl was drunk, under the influence of drugs and did not fight back, they upgraded the charges to rape on Monday.

Despite the outcry and anger provoked by such cases, Spain’s far-right Vox party has called for the repeal of domestic violence laws and attacked “psychopathic feminazis”.

On Thursday, the party boycotted the minute’s silence that Madrid city council had called to mark the murder of the latest victim of domestic violence, Adaliz Villagra.

Villagra, 31, was stabbed to death in front of her two children in the capital on Tuesday.

Vox’s decision to boycott the event and instead turn up with a sign reading “Violence has no gender” prompted a public row between Madrid’s conservative mayor, José Luis Martínez-Almeida, and Javier Ortega Smith, Vox’s general secretary.