The Guardian (USA)

Most girls and young women have experience­d abuse online, report finds

- Kaamil Ahmed

Most girls and young women using social media have experience­d abuse that has driven them offline and left them traumatise­d, according to a new global survey.

More than half of the 14,000 15- to 25-year-olds interviewe­d by Plan Internatio­nal said they had been cyberstalk­ed, sent explicit messages and images, or abused online.

Plan said it is a global problem and that social media companies had left girls to deal with online violence on their own.

The interviewe­es, from 22 countries, said no action was taken when they reported abuse.

“These attacks may not be physical, but they are often threatenin­g, relentless and limit girls’ freedom of expression,” said Plan’s CEO Anne-Birgitte Albrectsen. “Driving girls out of online spaces is hugely disempower­ing in an increasing­ly digital world, and damages their ability to be seen, heard and become leaders.”

The research found about 20% of girls had been forced off social media and another 12% had changed how they used it after receiving online violence.

Almost 40% said they had been attacked on Facebook, but interviewe­es also spoke about similar problems on all other platforms, including Instagram, WhatsApp, Snapchat, Twitter and TikTok.

The survey showed that many of the girls were targeted because of their race or identity. More than a third of interviewe­es who received abuse were from an ethnic minority and 56% identified as LGBTQ+.

Attacks consisted of abusive language, threats of sexual violence and body shaming. A quarter felt physically unsafe as a result.

“I had to take medication to be calm and many times I had to be sedated to be able to calm down,” feminist activist Nadiuska, 19, from Nicaragua, told Plan.

She said she had been insulted and received death threats, often from anonymous accounts.

Plan’s report said abusers often get around punishment­s by creating new accounts.

“Women close to me have been involved in circles of violence that are terrible, from having intimate informatio­n spread to death threats,” she said.

In 2018, the UN special rapporteur on violence against women called for government­s to create new laws that protect women in online spaces, based on rights to expression, privacy and freedom from violence.

Plan, which promotes girls’ rights,

echoed the call, urging government­s to create laws that hold social media companies to account for abuses on their platforms, as well as ensuring their own harassment laws are enforced against online violence.

“With Covid-19 driving more of our lives online and with internet access around the world improving, it is time for digital platforms to step up and protect their users,” said Albrectsen.

 ?? Photograph: Mixmike/Getty ?? Plan argues girls and young women are left to deal with abuse without adequate support from social media companies.
Photograph: Mixmike/Getty Plan argues girls and young women are left to deal with abuse without adequate support from social media companies.

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