THE LONGEST WAR: WOMEN UNDER SIEGE
From sexual slavery to domestic abuse, violence
against women is the world’s most common human rights violation.
By Sue Russell
For a shocking number of women all over
the world, liberation is just a word in the dictionary. Trapped
in cycles of violence, they live amidst deep-rooted gender inequality,
deprived of their very basic human freedoms. Violence against
women affects half the world’s population. It crosses cultures,
countries, continents, classes, income and education levels.
And five years after the UN’s Beijing Conference on Women, the
latest report from the UNICEF Innocenti Research Centre in Italy
still paints a very grim picture.
In India, dowry marriages (where the bride’s
father pays a sum of money to the groom-to-be) are now banned,
yet despite strict laws, dowry-related violence continues. And
if a dowry doesn’t satisfy the groom, a bride might pay with
her life.
"Now men actually draw up lists of
things that they want like a television, a cycle, gold jewelry,
a flat, or whatever," explains Ruchira Gupta of UNICEF.
"Sometimes fathers have to get into debt to provide for
the dowry. And if the dowry is not enough, kerosene is poured
over the girls and they’re burned to death, or they’re pushed
into ovens or thrown off balconies. Then the boy marries again
for another round of dowry."
The world’s fastest-growing crime is sex-trafficking
which is rampant everywhere from Albania to India. Each year,
up to two million young girls and women are shipped off to be
sex slaves in more affluent western destinations like the U.S.,
Canada and Britain. Sometimes an impoverished father will decide
to sell a young daughter to help feed his remaining children.
"It’s total bondage," Ruchira
Gupta says of sexual slavery. "The girls are aged thirteen
and they’re locked up, made to service twenty clients a day,
raped and beaten. By age 35, they’re ready to die because they’re
disease-ridden, they have HIV, two children, no old-age savings.
Some places are sending countries and some are receiving countries.
So no country is pure."
Female genital mutilation (FGM) is another
atrocity. Up to two million girls a year have part or all of
their genitalia removed with approximately 130 million women
globally believed to have endured this excruciating procedure.
Practised in 28 African nations and in some parts of Asia and
the Middle East, it can lead to death and infertility.
One piece of hopeful news: a group of brave
women in a Senegal village successfully fought to eradicate
FGM. Now 600 Senegal villages have followed suit and the women
have been invited to speak in other African countries.
Sex-selective abortions and high infanticide
rates are problems in cultures where boys are prized and girls
considered a liability. In one Bombay hospital, 95.5% of aborted
fetuses were found to be female. As a result, amnioscentesis
tests are now banned in India, yet many clinics still operate
brazenly.
In the US, the focus is on domestic violence.
28% of U.S. women in one study had experienced at least one
episode of physical violence with their partner and an estimated
20-50% of women and girls worldwide have experienced domestic
violence.
In only 44 of the world’s almost 200 nations
is domestic abuse illegal and prosecution is always difficult.
Because the old belief that interfamilial abuse is a private
family matter persists, re-education is vital.
While she was the US representative to the
UN Commission on the Status of Women, Maureen Reagan, daughter
of ex-president Ronald Reagan, made ten trips to Africa. She
attended the groundbreaking 3rd World Conference on Women in
Nairobi in l985 where previously taboo subjects like genital
mutilation were first mentioned.
"There’s no question women are victims,
from the immolation of women in India to just run of the mill
wife-beating here in the U.S., to genital mutilation,"
she says. "It’s going on everywhere because women are considered
weaker, and in many cases property.
"I myself was a victim of domestic
violence. I wrote about that in my book, ‘First Father, First
Daughter’, not because I wanted to become a poster child for
domestic violence but because I wanted people to realise that
it can happen to anybody and that we have to be strong enough
to break the cycle."
Indeed, the battered women issue is
so serious that in l999, the federal Centers for Disease Control
and Prevention funded the National Violence Against Women Prevention
Research Center. Linda Williams Ph.D., co-director of the Wellesley
Centers For Women facility at Wellesley College, Mass., is working
on a five-year study that will involve 1,000 families and help
determine the most effective ways to break cycles of domestic
abuse.
"There’s a big barrier to understanding
the problems of sexual assault by intimate partners," Williams
explains, "and often you can’t use the word rape because
people think that happens only outside of marriage. We are really
talking about sexual activities that are forced due to threat,
or physical force, or violence."
With a study by Johns Hopkins School
of Public Health finding that 1 in 3 women around the world
is beaten, abused or coerced into sex at some point, usually
by someone known to them, women have a long fight ahead. Yet
UNICEF’s Ruchira Gupta sees cause for optimism. "There’s
more debate and dialogue about women’s rights now," she
says, "and suddenly, women don’t feel isolated any more."