“We know African women are often a linchpin keeping families, communities, and nations together,” Ban said at the African launch of “UNiTE to End Violence against Women” campaign in
African women are the “driving force to overcome poverty, reduce hunger, fight illiteracy, heal the sick, prevent the spread of disease and promote stability,” he said in a message read on his behalf by Cheick Sidi Diarra, UN High Representative for the Least Developed Countries, Landlocked Developing Countries and
“But far from being empowered, women are all too often subjected to horrific abuse and violence,” Ban stressed in the message, a copy of which was sent to the Mehr News Agency and the Tehran Times daily by the United Nations Information Center (UNIC) in Tehran.
The Secretary General's UNiTE campaign, launched in 2008, calls for all countries to put in place strong laws, action plans, preventive measures, data collection, and systematic efforts to address sexual violence by 2015.
He noted that more than 5 million people have signed the “Say No to Violence Against Women” initiative, which spotlights the physical and sexual abuse experienced by up to 70 percent of all women from men in their lifetime – the majority from husbands or someone they know.
“They are now looking for answers from us, from you, to uphold their right to live ... free of this threat,” Ban added.
SN/PA
MNA
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