|
Associated Press, November 18, 2005
Violence
and discrimination against women is a major
cause of death
Ranks
with disease, hunger and war, study says.
Author : EDITH M. LEDERER
DATELINE: UNITED NATIONS
Violence against women is one of the four major
causes of death in the world today along with
disease, hunger and war, according to the head
of a Swiss defense institute that recently
published a major study entitled "Women
in an Insecure World."
Swiss Ambassador Theodor Winkler, director of
the Geneva Center for the Democratic Control
of Armed Forces, said the number of women who
die because of gender-related violence, deprivation
and discrimination is larger than the casualty
toll in all the wars of the 20th century combined.
"The deeply rooted phenomenon of violence
against women is one of the great crimes of
humanity," he told reporters Thursday,
in launching the study.
Winkler said the 335-page study by 60 authors
brings together data on violence against women
in daily life, in war and post-conflict situations
for the first time. The United Nations is also
doing a study on the issue which is expected
to be published next summer.
"Violence against women is one of the four
key reasons why women die on this planet, the
other ones being war, hunger and disease,"
he said. "We need to confront the world
with what it does in order to get enough political
momentum to confront this issue."
According to U.N. estimates, Winkler said, there
are up to 200 million fewer women in the world
than there should be, based on demographic
data which show that for every 103 boys born
there are 100 girls.
"If we have a population deficit globally
of 200 million women, the reason why they are
not here is simply that they have been killed,"
Winkler said. "It's as straightforward
as that - and that's for gender-related reasons."
The reasons include abortions for sex selection,
infanticide of girls, limited access to medical
care and food for young girls, honor killings,
dowry killings, violence in domestic life,
and deaths of girls and women in conflict and
post-conflict situations, he said.
The report did not list how many women were killed
for each reason.
But Winkler said that roughly 80 million of the
200 million missing women are the result of
abortions of female fetuses in societies where
boys have a higher value.
The report notes that medical testing for sex
selection, although officially outlawed, has
become "a booming business" in China,
India and South Korea, which have significantly
fewer girls than boys.
Winkler said if the number of missing women remains
at 200 million, this would mean that 2 to 3
million women per year are being killed "for
gender-related reasons."
He said that number of deaths compares with the
2.8 million people dying annually from AIDS
and the 1.27 million dying every year from
malaria and should not be ignored. He cited
figures tallying 190 million total casualties
on all the 20th century's wars.
"Globally, women aged between 15 and 44
are more likely to be injured or die as a result
of male violence than through cancer, traffic
accidents, malaria and war combined,"
Winkler said.
"The victims are claimed in conflicts, but
also in everyday life," Winkler wrote
in the study. "The causes are multiple,
but eventually boil down to the simple fact
that for all too many, a woman's life and dignity
are worth less than a man's. This situation
is simply intolerable."
In addition to the women who are killed, he said,
scores are physically or psychologically wounded,
if not maimed for life.
The World Health Organization estimates that
globally one woman in five will during her
lifetime be the subject of rape or attempted
rape, and one in three will be the victim of
violence, Winkler said.
That means 700 million women have been or will
be raped during their lifetime, including 25
million in the United States, he said.
Switzerland's Foreign Minister Micheline Calmy-Rey
said in a forward to the report that "much
more attention" must be given to the consequences
of war for women and children, who comprise
the majority of refugees and internally displaced
people and endure rape and sexual abuse.
The Geneva Center was established in 2000 at
the initiative of the Swiss government to support
the democratic control of armed forces and
security sector reforms. It is supported by
46 countries including the United States.
<< Associated Press -- 11/18/05 >>
Send this page to a
friend!
Home About
Us Newsletters News
Archives Donate
|