Non sono certo solito mandare in lista i release di questa organizzazione, ma
visto quello che l'8 di marzo rappresenta -- e che è stato celebrato per benino
da Tuula carissima -- sembra accettabile fare un ulteriore contributo.
M
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News Release Issued by the International Secretariat of Amnesty International
AI Index: ACT 77/021/2004
March 2004
Amnesty International launches global campaign to stop violence against women -
A cancer and human rights atrocity
Violence against women is a cancer eating away the core of every society, in
every country of the world, Irene Khan, Secretary General of Amnesty
International, said today at the launch of the organisation's global campaign to
stop violence against women.
Whether in times of peace or war, women are subjected to atrocities simply
because they are women. Millions of women are beaten, raped, murdered,
assaulted, mutilated and even denied the right to ever exist. At least one in
three women in the world will suffer serious violence in their lifetime.
Unveiling its worldwide Stop Violence Against Women Campaign, Amnesty
International called for urgent action by every man and woman to end this
outrageous scandal.
"This is not something that just happens over there, it happens here. It is not
something that only happens to other people, it happens to you, your friends and
your family. Until all of us, men as well as women, say 'no, I will not let this
happen', it will not stop," said Irene Khan.
"Violence against women is a human rights atrocity. Human rights are more than
sets of laws and obligations, they embody a promise that, in equality, we are
all entitled to the same rights. Violence against women is the cavernous rift
between that promise and the will of governments, local authorities, religious,
business and community leaders to fulfil it."
Amnesty International's report It's in our hands - Stop Violence against Women
reveals the multiple causes of violence from armed conflict to family violence
and harmful traditional practices that seek to control women's sexuality.
"Violence threatens women in multiple forms during conflict. From the female
child soldiers who are routinely raped by their own troops and the civilian
women and girls who are mutilated, raped and murdered as a weapon of war, to the
escalation in violence within the family as troops return home - armed conflict
is having a devastating and desperate impact on women that goes far beyond the
inherent violence of war."
Also highlighting the global problem of violence in the home and community,
Amnesty International points to every country in the world for failing to
protect women in their own homes.
"Behind closed doors and in secret, women are subjected to violence by their
partners and close relatives, too ashamed and afraid to report it and so seldom
taken seriously when they do."
Even where legislation exists to prevent and punish such violence, the
authorities routinely fail to implement it and in some areas, parallel systems
of authority such as community and religious leaders actually allow it to
persist, Amnesty International added.
"From the battlefield to the bedroom, women are at risk," Irene Khan said. "They
are the first to feel the lack of poor social services, the first to be denied
education and health care. The effects of economic globalization are leaving
more and more women trapped in poverty on the margins of society. Poverty leaves
women more exposed to violence, less able to escape it. It severely restricts
women's ability to organize and fight for change. In this, as in so many other
ways, governments are failing to address the real 'terror' of our world that
millions of women face every day."
Amnesty International paid tribute to women's organisations around the world for
the enormous strides that have been made to counter violence and achieve justice
and equality over the last few decades.
"There is much to be optimistic about the future as real solutions to the
problem do exist and have been demonstrated to work. We will join with women's
organizations to lobby for change," said Irene Khan.
"As a human rights organisation we will mobilise our members and supporters
around the world. We will engage men as well as women. Men must play a crucial
part if we are to end violence against women."
During the campaign, Amnesty International will:
- Call on all people, men and women, to raise their hands to end violence
against women.
- Work for a world in which all cultures, traditions, political and judicial
systems regard violence against women as abhorrent.
- Demand accountability and fight impunity for violence against women whether in
peace time or during conflict.
- Seek the abolition of laws that discriminate against women, and the enactment
and effective implementation of laws and other measures to protect women from
violence.
- Hold states individually and collectively accountable under international and
domestic laws to prevent, investigate, punish and redress all acts of violence
against women whether in peacetime or during conflict.
- Secure effective action to stop violence against women at the community level
from local government or religious, traditional and informal authorities.
- Campaign to end impunity for combatants who commit violence against women.
"Violence against women is not normal, legal nor acceptable and should never be
tolerated or justified. It can and must be stopped," Irene Khan concluded.
"It is in our hands to make a difference and to bring human rights home."
Visit the Stop violence against website
http://amnesty-news.c.topica.com/maab0Tdaa4Vnsbb0hcYb/
Read the report: It's in our hands - Stop violence against women
http://amnesty-news.c.topica.com/maab0Tdaa4Vntbb0hcYb/
View all AI documents on Women
http://amnesty-news.c.topica.com/maab0Tdaa4Vnubb0hcYb/
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