Rape and
abuse of women is a global human rights crisis. This act would support
survivors and hold abusers to account
![]() |
| Indian women shout slogans during an event supporting the One Billion Rising movement to end violence against women and girls. Photograph: Mahesh Kumar A/AP |
As 25
November, the International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women,
approaches and the International Violence Against Women Act is poised for reintroduction
in the US Congress, the time is now to prioritize ending violence against women
and girls worldwide.
Violence
against women takes many forms, including rape, domestic violence, female
genital mutilation, and acid attacks, to name just a few. It's a global human rights crisis that exacerbates instability and insecurity around the world.
But it is
also an issue that affects individual women intimately. United Nations statistics show that one in three women will be raped, beaten, coerced into sex
or otherwise abused during their lifetime. This is a shocking number, and in my
experience, a vast underestimation of the true number of women affected.
I count
myself among those women. As a teenager, my boyfriend cut me with his
switchblade. The physical wounds were relatively minor, the psychological ones
less so.
These
incidents of violence are more common than most people think. Whether it is a
coworker who confides in me about her experience with domestic abuse or a
friend who was date-raped, these are the stories that I'm told constantly.
A Chinese
woman that I was tutoring in English while I was living in the Republic of
Palau confided in me that she had been duped into forced labor. Her story
followed the typical fact pattern of someone who has been trafficked. Deceived
by false promises of a good job in another country, she had followed a
recruiter overseas. Once there, he had taken her passport, confined her to the
premises and refused to pay her until she agreed to engage in sex work. She asked
for my help, and several tense weeks later, we managed to get her out of the
country.
I wish I
could say that these stories are unique, that somehow my work or interest in
women's human rights is the reason that I know them. Sadly, this is not the
case. With one in four pregnant women physically or sexually abused and
statistics such as that from South Africa, where every six hours a woman is murdered by an intimate partner (pdf), violence against women is one of the
world's most prevalent human rights abuses – one which nearly a billion women
globally will experience in their lifetimes.
But this
violence is not inevitable. There are concrete steps that all governments,
including the United States, can take to end violence against women and girls
around the world.
One of the
most critical steps is for the US Congress to pass the International Violence Against Women Act, which makes ending violence against women and girls a top US
diplomatic priority. The legislation would codify and implement the US Strategy to Prevent and Respond to Gender-Based Violence Globally (pdf). The strategy,
promulgated by President Obama last year, is an excellent start to ensuring US
commitment to this issue – and for setting the model for other countries to
follow suit. The I-VAWA would support survivors and programs that hold
perpetrators accountable and prevent violence, while ensuring that US foreign
aid money is used in the most cost-effective and impactful way possible.
The I-VAWA
provides a comprehensive approach to address these priorities within a human
rights framework by enhancing the effectiveness and efficiency of existing US
government programs that seek to tackle violence against women. It recognizes
that violence intersects with nearly every facet of women's lives and creates a
framework for better outcomes for women and communities. It should be a
bi-partisan cause.
Today, I'm
testifying before Congress and asking it to take concrete steps to end
gender-based violence. I'm not doing it just for me or the women whose stories
I know intimately, but for every woman around the world who has or could be the
next to experience violence.

No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.