By
Ban Ki-moon
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Ban Ki-moon
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As we commemorate International Women’s
Day, we must look back on a year of shocking crimes of violence against women
and girls and ask ourselves how to usher in a better future.
One young woman
was gang-raped to death. Another later committed suicide out of a sense of
shame that should have attached to the perpetrators. Young teens were shot at
close range for daring to seek an education. These atrocities, which rightly
sparked global outrage, were part of a much larger problem that pervades
virtually every society and every realm of life.
Look around at the women you are with.
Think of those you cherish in your families and your communities and understand
that there is a statistical likelihood that many of them have suffered violence
in their lifetime.
Even more have comforted a sister or friend, sharing their
grief and anger following an attack.
This year on International Women’s Day,
we convert our outrage into action. We declare that we will prosecute crimes
against women – and never allow women to be subjected to punishments for the
abuses they have suffered. We renew our pledge to combat this global health
menace wherever it may lurk – in homes and businesses, in war zones and placid
countries, and in the minds of people who allow violence to continue.
We also make a special promise to women
in conflict situations, where sexual violence too often becomes a tool of war
aimed at humiliating the enemy by destroying their dignity. To those women we
say: the United Nations stands with you.
As Secretary-General, I insist that
the welfare of all victims of sexual violence in conflict must be at the
forefront of our activities. And I instruct my senior advisors to make our
response to sexual violence a priority in all of our peace-making, peacekeeping
and peace building activities.
The United Nations system is advancing
our UNiTE to End Violence against Women campaign, which is based on the simple
but powerful premise that all women and girls have a fundamental human right to
live free of violence.
This week in New York, at the
Commission on the Status of Women, the world is holding the largest-ever UN
assembly on ending violence against women. We will make the most of this
gathering – and we keep pressing for progress long after it concludes.
I welcome the many governments, groups
and individuals who have contributed to this campaign. I urge everyone to join
our effort. Whether you lend your funds to a cause or your voice to an outcry,
you can be part of our global push to end this injustice and provide women and
girls with the security, safety and freedom they deserve.
• Ban Ki-moon, Secretary-General of the
United Nations.

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