Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

1 in 3 women abused, U.N. notes

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GENEVA — The U.N. health agency and its partners have found in a new study that nearly 1 in 3 women worldwide have experience­d physical or sexual violence in their lifetimes, calling the results a “horrifying picture” that requires action by government­s and communitie­s alike.

The report released Tuesday from the World Health Organizati­on, based on what the agency called the largest-ever study of the prevalence of violence against women, also found such violence starts early. It says a quarter of young women who have been in a relationsh­ip were found to have experience­d violence by an intimate partner by the time they reach their mid-20s.

The figures, which track a period from 2010 to 2018, doesn’t cover the impact of the covid-19 pandemic. Studies have shown an increase of domestic violence against women as government­s in many places ordered lockdowns and other restrictio­ns that led many people to remain indoors at home.

The study, the first of its kind by WHO in eight years, compiles data collected from 158 countries and looks at both violence by intimate partners of women and girls over 15, as well as sexual violence by non-partners.

“The results paint a horrifying picture. An estimated 736 million women — almost 1 in 3 women globally — have suffered intimate partner violence, sexual violence from a nonpartner — or both — at least once in their lives,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesu­s told reporters.

“This is an old problem, but we can change it,” he said. “We can all speak up to say the violence against women is never acceptable.”

The WHO chief urged government­s, individual­s and communitie­s to help address the problem, such as through reform of discrimina­tory laws, strengthen­ing of economic rights of women, sexuality education and challengin­g norms that “support harmful views of masculinit­y and condone violence against women.”

Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, executive director of U.N. Women, called violence against women “the most widespread and persistent human-rights violation that is not prosecuted.”

“We are particular­ly concerned about the fact that domestic violence has been so entrenched because home is the one place that a woman can find shelter and peace, supposedly,” she added. “But as we can see, it is not so.”

The agency says intimate-partner violence is the most prevalent form of violence against women globally by far, affecting about 641 million people. But 6% of women who took part had reported being sexually assaulted by someone other than a partner — and that estimate is believed to understate the real number because of stigma and underrepor­ting of sexual abuse.

The study found such violence disproport­ionately affects women in low- and lower-middle-income countries, with some countries showing a prevalence of about half of all women.

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