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..Press
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UNESCAP News Services
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Date 16
November 2004
Press Release No: L/60/2004
THE SECRETARY-GENERAL'S MESSAGE ON THE INTERNATIONAL
DAY FOR THE ELIMINATION OF VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN, 25 November
2004
Violence against women is global in reach, and
takes place in all societies and cultures, affecting women no
matter what their race, ethnicity, social origin, property,
birth or other status may be.
Gender-based violence is particularly pervasive
in situations of armed conflict, when women and girls become
victims of rape and other forms of sexual abuse, and are vulnerable
to trafficking. Last May, in an important step towards ending
the impunity with such crimes are committed, the Trial Chamber
of the Special Court for Sierra Leone approved a motion to add
a new count of "forced marriage" to indictments against
six defendants. Thus, for the first time, forced marriage will
be prosecuted as a crime against humanity.
Violence against women is a challenge in itself,
but comes with an added deadly dimension: the risk of HIV infection.
Sexual violence increases women's vulnerability to the virus.
All too frequently, the threat of violence forces women to have
unprotected sex. Violence can also make it impossible for women
to seek information, follow treatment or even raise the subject
for discussion.
The Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination
against Women, the human rights treaty body that monitors implementation
of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
against Women, continues to play a dynamic role in ensuring
that this issue is a high priority for the international community.
The Optional Protocol to the Convention gives women and groups
of women the right to petition, and has the potential to become
a highly effective tool for addressing gender-based violence
and other violations of women's human rights.
On this fifth International Day for the Elimination
of Violence against Women, let us be encouraged that there is
a growing understanding of the problem. But let us also pledge
to do our utmost to protect women, banish such violence, and
build a world in which women enjoy their rights and freedoms
on an equal basis with men.
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