Violence
Against Women: A Fact Sheet
In the US, a woman is raped every 6 minutes; a woman is battered
every 15 seconds. In North Africa, 6,000 women are genitally
mutilated each day. This year, more than 15,000 women will
be sold into sexual slavery in China. 200 women in Bangladesh
will be horribly disfigured when their spurned husbands or
suitors burn them with acid. More than 7,000 women in India
will be murdered by their families and in-laws in disputes
over dowries. Violence against women is rooted in a global
culture of discrimination which denies women equal rights with
men and which legitimizes the appropriation of women's bodies
for individual gratification or political ends. Every year,
violence in the home and the community devastates the lives
of millions of women. (Broken Bodies, Shattered Minds:
Torture and Ill Treatment of Women, Amnesty International,
2001)
Background
- Violence against women feeds off discrimination and serves
to reinforce it. When women are abused in custody, when they
are raped by armed forces as "spoils of war", or
when they are terrorized by violence in the home, unequal
power relations between men and women are both manifested
and enforced.
- Violence against women is compounded by discrimination
on the grounds of race, ethnicity, sexual identity, social
status, class, and age. Such multiple forms of discrimination
further restrict women's choices, increase their vulnerability
to violence and make it even harder for women to obtain justice.
- There is an unbroken spectrum of violence that women face
at the hands of people who exert control over them. States
have the obligation to prevent, protect against, and punish
violence against women whether perpetrated by private or
public actors. States have a responsibility to uphold standards
of due diligence and take steps to fulfill their responsibility
to protect individuals from human rights abuses.
International Women's Human Rights Foundations
- The Universal Declaration of Human Rights states
that "everyone is entitled to all the rights and freedoms
set forth in this Declaration, without distinction of any
kind, such as race, color, sex, language, religion, political
or other opinion, national or social origin, property, birth
or other status." (Article 2)
- The Declaration on the Elimination of Violence
Against Women states that "violence
against women means any act of gender-based violence
that results in, or is likely to result in, physical,
sexual or psychological harm or suffering to women, including
threats of such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation
of liberty, whether occurring in public or in private
life." (Article 1) It further asserts that states
have an obligation to " exercise due diligence to
prevent, investigate and, in accordance with national
legislation, punish acts of violence against women, whether
those acts are perpetrated by the State or by private
persons." (Article 4-c)
- The Convention on the Elimination of all forms
of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) ,
defines discrimination against women as any "distinction,
exclusion or restriction made on the basis of sex which
has the effect or purpose of impairing or nullifying
the recognition, enjoyment or exercise by women, irrespective
of their marital status, on the basis of equality between
men and women, of human rights or fundamental freedoms
in the political, economic, social, cultural, civil or
any other field." (Article 1)
Violence Against Women : A Human Rights Violation
Violence against women is rampant in all corners of the world.
Such violence is a human rights violation that manifests itself
in a number of ways, including:
Violence against women in custody
The imbalance of power between inmates and guards is a result
of prisoners' total dependency on correctional officers and
guards' ability to withhold privileges and is manifest in direct
physical force and indirect abuses. Because incarcerated women
are largely invisible to the public eye, little is done when
the punishment of imprisonment is compounded with that of rape,
sexual assault, groping during body searches, and shackling
during childbirth. Women are often coerced into providing sex
for "favors" such as extra food or personal hygiene
products, or to avoid punishment. There is little medical or
psychological care available to inmates. Though crimes in prison
such as rape are prevalent, few perpetrators of violence against
female inmates are ever held accountable. In 1997, for example,
only ten prison employees in the entire federal system were
disciplined for sexual misconduct.
Acid Burning and Dowry Deaths
Women's subjugation to men is pervasive in the political,
civil, social, cultural, and economic spheres of many countries.
In such societies, a woman who turns down a suitor or does
not get along with her in-laws far too frequently becomes a
victim of a violent form of revenge: acid burning. Acid is
thrown in her face or on her body and can blind her in addition
to often fatal third-degree burns. Governments do little to
prevent the sale of acid to the public or to punish those who
use it to kill and maim. Similarly, the ongoing reality of
dowry-related violence is an example of what can happen when
women are treated as property. Brides unable to pay the high "price" to
marry are punished by violence and often death at the hands
of their in-laws or their own husbands.
"Honor" Killings
In some societies, women are often looked upon as representatives
of the honor of the family. When women are suspected of extra-marital
sexual relations, even if in the case of rape, they can be
subjected to the cruelest forms of indignity and violence,
often by their own fathers or brothers. Women who are raped
and are unable to provide explicit evidence, are sometimes
accused of zina, or the crime of unlawful sexual relations,
the punishment for which is often death by public stoning.
Such laws serve as a great obstacle inhibiting women from pursuing
cases against those who raped them. Assuming an accused woman's
guilt, male family members believe that they have no other
means of undoing a perceived infringement of "honor" other
than to kill the woman.
Domestic violence
Violence against women is a global pandemic. Without exception,
a woman's greatest risk of violence is from someone she knows.
Domestic violence is a violation of a woman's right to physical
integrity, to liberty, and all too often, to her right to life
itself. When states fail to take the basic steps needed to
protect women from domestic violence or allow these crimes
to be committed with impunity, states are failing in their
obligation to protect women from torture.
Female Genital Mutilation
Female genital mutilation is the removal of part or all of
the external female genitalia. In its most severe form, a woman
or girl has all of her genitalia removed and then stitched
together, leaving a small opening for intercourse and menstruation.
It is practiced in 28 African countries on the pretext of cultural
tradition or hygiene. An estimated 135 million girls have undergone
FGM with dire consequences ranging from infection (including
HIV) to sterility, in addition to the devastating psychological
effects. Though all the governments of the countries in which
FGM is practiced have legislation making it illegal, the complete
lack of enforcement and prosecution of the perpetrators means
FGM continues to thrive.
Human Rights Violations Based on Actual or Perceived
Sexual Identity
Sexuality is regulated in a gender specific way and maintained
through strict constraints imposed by cultural norms and sometimes
through particular legal measures supporting those norms. The
community, which can include religious institutions, the media,
family and cultural networks, regulates women's sexuality and
punishes women who do not comply. Such women include lesbians,
women who appear "too masculine," women who try to
freely exercise their rights, and women who challenge male
dominance. Lesbian women, or women who are perceived to be
lesbian, experience abuses by state authorities in prisons,
by the police, as well as private actors such as their family
and community. Numerous cases document young lesbians being
beaten, raped, forcibly impregnated or married, and otherwise
attacked by family members to punish them or "correct" their
sexual identity. Lesbians in the United States face well-founded
fears of persecution by police because of their sexual identity
and violence against lesbians occurs with impunity on a regular
basis.
Gender Based Asylum
The UN High Commission on Refugees advocates that "women
fearing persecution or severe discrimination on the basis of
their gender should be considered a member of a social group
for the purposes of determining refugee status." (Guidelines
on the Protection of Refugee Women) Such persecution
may include harms unique to their gender such as, but not limited
to, female genital mutilation, forcible abortion, domestic
violence that the state refuses to act on and honor killings.
However, women seeking asylum in the United States rarely gain
refugee status based on claims of gender-related violence,
as U.S. asylum adjudicators apply a restrictive interpretation
of the international definition of a refugee entitled to persecution.
In particular, lesbian women seeking asylum from sexuality-based
persecution in their countries of origin often, and legitimately,
fear disclosing their sexuality to authorities.
The Problem of Impunity
Perpetrators of violence against women are rarely held accountable for their
acts. Women who are victims of gender-related violence often have little recourse
because many state agencies are themselves guilty of gender bias and discriminatory
practices. Many women opt not to report cases of violence to authorities because
they fear being ostracized and shamed by communities that are too often quick
to blame victims of violence for the abuses they have suffered. When women
do challenge their abusers, it can often only be accomplished by long and humiliating
court battles with little sympathy from authorities or the media. Violence
against women is so deeply embedded in society that it often fails to garner
public censure and outrage.
Violence against women is a violation of human
rights that cannot be justified by any political, religious,
or cultural claim. A global culture of discrimination against
women allows violence to occur daily and with impunity.
Amnesty International calls on you to help us eradicate
violence against women and help women to achieve lives
of equality and human dignity.
For more information on women's human rights, visit http://www.amnestyusa.org/women or
contact us at AIUSA, 322 Eighth Avenue New York, NY 10001 or
at (212) 633-4292. |