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NEW UN-BACKED
TV SERIES PEELS AWAY THE SILENCE, 17/04/2008
(MaximsNews Network)
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UNITED
NATIONS - / MaximsNews Network / 17
April 2008--With
one in three women worldwide suffering rape or attempted rape during her
lifetime and at least one in three likely to be beaten, coerced into sex or
otherwise abused, a UN-backed television series starting on April 18 will seek to
peel away the silence surrounding these brutalities.
“Even
where there is no war, women’s bodies continue to be battlegrounds,” says
Thoraya Ahmed Obaid, Executive Director of the UN Population Fund (UNFPA),
which with other UN agencies provided information for “Women on the
Frontline,” the seven-part investigative series by BBC World to be broadcast
to some 300 million households.
“Women
and girls are at risk of violence when carrying out essential daily activities
– within their homes, or while walking, taking public transport to work,
collecting water or firewood. Demanding the end of violence against women is
about protecting human rights and ensuring that women live in safety and
dignity.”
British
singer Annie Lennox, presenting the series, stresses that violence against women
threatens the lives of more young women than cancer, malaria or war. “It
affects one in three women worldwide. It leaves women mentally scarred for life,
and it is usually inflicted by a family member,” she says.
Trafficking,
sexual harassment, female genital mutilation, dowry murder, “honour”
killings and female infanticide are also part of the problem.
“The
gaps in addressing violence against women are in terms of political will,
resources and the strong involvement of men and boys in insisting on zero
tolerance,” says Joanne Sandler, acting Executive Director of the UN
Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM).
“If we
can’t put an end to the pandemic of violence against women, we can’t achieve
any of the other agreed goals: development, equality or peace.”
The
seven films cover:
-
Nepal,
where thousands of women are trafficked each year;
-
Turkey,
where killing in the name of honour continues;
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Morocco,
where women political activists who have survived torture and imprisonment
testify before a Government truth and reconciliation commission;
-
Democratic
Republic of Congo (DRC), where women bear the brunt of a 10-year war in
eastern provinces;
-
Colombia,
where women have been tortured in the shadow of a guerilla war;
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Mauritania,
where women who have been raped may go to prison;
-
and
Austria, where, under a new law, perpetrators of domestic violence are
forced to leave home.
“We
found girls who said they had been raped and who were being sent to prison for
the simple reason that there was no tangible proof of this violence,” says
Zeinabou Mint Taleb Moussa, a lawyer who heads the Mauritanian Association for
Maternal and Child Health. “I would prefer them to go through the justice
system or even better, I would prefer that the boys are arrested and the girls
are recognized as victims.”
Secretary-General
Ban Ki-moon, acknowledging the depth of the problem, launched a multi-year
campaign eight weeks ago to eliminate the scourge and a number of UN agencies
are involved in various aspects of the battle. Labels:
United
Nations, U.N.,UNFPA,
UN Population
Fund, TV series, television
series, UNIFEM, UN
Development Fund for Women, BBC
World
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