CSW70: Conflict-related sexual violence surges by 87% in 2 years – Rapporteurs

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Rapporteurs at 70th session of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) have reported increase in conflict-related sexual violence against women, which according to them rose by 87 per cent in two years.

The rapporteurs spoke at the opening of CSW on Monday at UN Headquarters in New York, focusing on rights, justice and action for all women and girls.

They also noted that roughly 70 per cent of countries reported greater justice barriers for women while 54 per cent lack consent-based rape laws.

“The measures we have taken to ensure justice are grossly insufficient,” Reem Alsalem, Special Rapporteur on violence against women and girls, its causes and consequences, said.

“This has become particularly clear following the partial release of the information on the atrocities committed by the Epstein criminal enterprise,” she added.

“They have been committed across the globe for decades, while flaunting nauseating levels of impunity.”

These crimes may amount to crimes against humanity, and the failure of many governments to still initiate investigations into crimes for which they have jurisdiction is one example of “our collective failure to achieve justice”.

“I dwell on this because this is just the tip of the iceberg of a wider, systematic and disturbing trend,” she said.

According to her, women and girls are also amongst the first to be killed in illegal acts of aggression, as we have seen recently in Iran and the long-standing attacks on Lebanon.

“Both factors I have just mentioned have one thing in common,” she said, adding: “They tell a story of absolute alarming levels of impunity and sky-high barriers to obtaining accountability”.

Further, she said that the dilution of agreed on language and terminology that erased women, girls and female specific needs in law and in practice is a form of regression.

“Since you cannot protect what you cannot define, you cannot, by extension, advocate for the rights of a group you cannot define,” she concluded.

Also, Claudia Flores, Chair of the Working Group on discrimination against women and girls, said that across regions, the Group increasingly hears a shared concern from civil society partners.

She said the group shared concern from civil society partners: frustration not only with the continued lack of implementation of agreed commitments, but also with the persistent gap between “feminist expectations and institutional offerings”.

“This observation is sobering. But we have the knowledge, the tools and the experience needed to move forward. The task before us is to translate that knowledge into action,” she said.

The Group’s most recent thematic report examines the gendered dimensions of care and support systems and highlights the direct connection between rights in the care sector and access to justice.

Flores highlighted two guidance documents – one on substantive gender equality and one on the rights of women and girls in family life.

She said that they offered frameworks to support States and other actors in achieving measurable progress on gender equality across sectors, while promoting inclusive and rights-based approaches to family life.

The Working Group’s forthcoming annual thematic report will focus on women’s and girls’ rights in the context of digital technologies and artificial intelligence.

Also Read:5 women die from domestic violence in 2024 – Lagos Govt.

Guterres warns world ‘brimming with conflict’ as global cooperation frays weakens

 

“If our institutions are to remain credible, they must deliver change where justice is lived – in everyday realities and in the systems that shape them.”

CSW is the United Nations’ principal global body dedicated to promoting gender equality and the rights and empowerment of women.

Established in 1946 by the UN Economic and Social Council, the Commission plays a central role in setting global standards on women’s rights and reviewing progress on gender equality. (NAN)

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