Violence against women 'a pandemic', warns UN envoy
Source: The Guardian
Violence against women a pandemic, warns UN envoy
A decade after Istanbul convention was drawn up to end gender-based violence, activists report decline in womens rights and safety
Sarah Johnson and Ruth Michaelson
Thu 13 May 2021 13.14 BST
A decade after the launch of the Istanbul convention, the landmark human rights treaty to stop gender-based violence, women are facing a global assault on their rights and safety, according to campaigners.
This week marked 10 years since the first 13 countries signed up to the convention, seen as a turning point in efforts to address violence against women.
Yet despite 46 countries signing the treaty, the world has become gripped by a pandemic of violence against women, exacerbated and exposed by Covid-19, according to a UN envoy.
The Covid pandemic revealed what was happening before, said Dubravka imonović, UN special rapporteur on violence against women. She said across the world there had been a stark increase in calls to domestic violence helplines, reports of women missing or killed, and a lack of safe places for those fleeing abuse.
We have a pandemic of violence against women that was not addressed properly in a huge number of states, she said.
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Read more:
https://www.theguardian.com/global-development/2021/may/13/violence-against-women-a-pandemic-warns-un-envoy