skip to main |
skip to sidebar
Home »
Unlabelled »
1 Billion Rising to end violence against girls
Posted by Unknown
Tuesday, June 11, 2013
0 comments

When a 23-year-old student in Delhi was beaten, gang raped and
murdered as she rode a bus home, it shocked the world and sparked mass
protests against violent attitudes towards women.
In India, the
gruesome attack forced the nation to have an uncomfortable conversation
about the deep rooted discrimination against its women. But this is not
an isolated case - sadly violence is a fact of life for many women and
girls across the whole world.
This week, I'll be travelling to the
Democratic Republic of the Congo where rape has been used as a weapon of
war and a tool to terrorise girls and women. But this is not a
'developing world' problem - a United Nations report found that up to
70% of women experience physical or sexual violence from men in their
lifetime - the majority by husbands, intimate partners or someone they
know. That equates to one billion women and girls who will be raped or
beaten in their lifetime.
This Thursday, the 14th February, the One
Billion Rising coalition is mobilising men and women across the world to
demand an end to this violence. I'm proud that Save the Children India,
Save the Children in Nepal and other Save the Children offices across
the world will be supporting this day of action and saying enough is
enough.
Violence against women begins with violence against girls. In
many countries, this begins even before birth -estimates suggest that
there are over 100 million 'missing women' as a result of sex-selective
abortions.
For far too many girls this violence continues through
childhood. In its most obvious forms that means that millions of girls
face being victims of sexual violence, female genital mutilation and
forced into early marriages. In the next decade more than 100 million
girls are expected to be married before they reach 18. Early marriage
increases the likelihood of early pregnancy and that substantially
increases a child's risk of ill-health and even death - babies born to
girls in their teens face a 50% higher risk of dying before age one than
babies born to women in their 20s.
But violence comes in less
obvious forms too. Excess female childhood mortality is on the rise in
several areas of the world. Globally, there are 107 female child deaths
for every 100 deaths amongst male children. Often because of a lower
value put on them girls eat last (and least) in vulnerable households
around the world and have less access to healthcare than boys. Gender
discrimination towards women is inseparably linked to child
survival-studies have repeatedly shown that the mortality, health and
well-being of children are intimately linked to the health of their
mothers.
What can we do about this? Awareness raising initiatives,
such as One Billion Rising, are essential. They help to challenge a
culture of impunity and social acceptance which too often means violence
is accepted as a fact of life and perpetrators go unpunished.
Protection, education and empowerment are also vital. We work in
communities with both men and women to ensure the health and wellbeing
of girls and pregnant women and to tackle this discrimination and
violence.
This Thursday, I hope that millions of women, men, boys
and girls will rise up and join the call against violence. But the 14th
February must just be the beginning- it is only through a truly global,
concerted effort that we can hope to end this violence and
discrimination and achieve the change needed to ensure no girl growing
up has to live in fear.
0 komentar:
Post a Comment