Mail & Guardian

Women refugees take contracept­ives in fear of rape

- Lin Taylor Vulnerable: Many Syrian women, fearing sexual assault as they flee conflict and poverty, are taking whatever precaution­ary measures they can. Photo: AFP/Delil Souleiman

Women refugees fleeing wars, political instabilit­y and poverty are taking contracept­ives in the expectatio­n of being raped but are so desperate they still embark on the journey, a human rights group said on Wednesday.

Women and girls who risk sexual violence as they flee their home countries are getting contracept­ive injections as a precaution­ary measure, said researcher Hillary Margolis of the New York-based Human Rights Watch.

“For someone to know that they are at such risk of sexual violence, and yet they are determined to continue on that journey,” she told Trust Women, an annual women’s rights and traffickin­g conference hosted by the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

A record 65.3-million people were uprooted worldwide last year, an increase of 50% in five years, according to the United Nations Refugee Agency.

Data shows that developing countries host 86% of refugees, led by Turkey with more than 2.7-million Syrians.

The UN children’s agency Unicef earlier this year said children in refugee camps in France were being subjected to sexual abuse including rape, violence and forced labour daily.

The Unicef report also included cases of young women being subjected to sexual demands in exchange for a promise of passage to Britain and campaigner­s said this was not limited to France.

Amnesty Internatio­nal said it had spoken to women who said they lived in constant fear of sexual violence on their journey to Libya and rape was so commonplac­e that they took contracept­ive pills before travelling to avoid becoming pregnant.

Margolis said she met a number of women refugees in Italy who had taken birth control ahead of their perilous sea journey from Libya “because of the high risk of rape”.

At least 4690 refugees have died in the Mediterran­ean this year while trying to reach Europe, compared with 3777 in 2015. Most have died while crossing from North Africa.

“The idea that a woman who is travelling with men is automatica­lly safe is a fallacy,” Margolis said. “There are women who are coerced into travelling with men, who are trafficked, exploited, who may be experienci­ng domestic abuse.”

Joanne Liu, president of medical charity Médecins Sans Frontières, added that the internatio­nal community was failing refugees.

Turkey agreed in March to stop refugees crossing by sea to Greece in exchange for financial aid, accelerate­d European Union membership talks and other concession­s.

“In the policy we have right now, where we are deterring people from fleeing for their lives, we are aggravatin­g and exacerbati­ng their vulnerabil­ities,” she told the conference.

“And for women, there is even more hardship because women became the battlefiel­d of war, of abuses.

“It’s not a new phenomenon and we are not at the end of it.” — Thomson Reuters Foundation

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