Giornata Internazionale per l’eliminazione della violenza contro le donne

Commission and High Representative/Vice-President reinforce their commitment to protect women and girls from violence

https://ec.europa.eu/commission/presscorner/detail/en/statement_23_6003

Ahead of the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women on 25 November, the European Commission and the High Representative/Vice-President issued the following statement:

“Globally, the rights of women and girls have faced threats, reductions, or complete elimination, significantly impeding progress achieved over decades. The European Union continues to stand up against all forms of violence against women and girls. We maintain our unwavering support for women and girls who have suffered from violence, as victims and survivors, and condemn the use of sexual and gender-based violence as a weapon of war. 

Violence against women and girls is a scar on all societies. The facts are shocking: in the EU and across the world, one in three women have experienced physical or sexual violence, including abuse, harassment, rape, sexual exploitation, genital mutilation, forced marriage and femicide. Invisible despair is what many women and girls have to live with. Protecting them and ending violence against women means more than striving for gender equality. It means fulfilling basic human rights. It means urgently bringing the perpetrators to justice.

We join the UN’s Global Campaign to End Violence against Women. As co-leader of the Generation Equality Forum’s Action Coalition on Gender-Based Violence, we affirm our steadfast dedication to the immediate eradication of violence against women and girls, both within and beyond the European Union. We stand in solidarity with our partners, civil society, women’s rights groups, and human rights defenders, echoing their demand for justice and accountability.

This year, the EU acceded to the Istanbul Convention, marking a major step forward in making Europe a safer place for women and girls. The EU is now bound by ambitious and comprehensive standards to prevent and combat gender-based violence. Member States will have to implement measures such as training professionals in close contact with victims of violence, running awareness-raising campaigns or ensuring dissuasive sanctions for perpetrators.”


Scopri di più da Italianistica, Didattica Innovativa, Internazionalizzazione

Abbonati per ricevere gli ultimi articoli inviati alla tua e-mail.

Pubblicato da Marzia Vacchelli

Stiftungslektorin Fachrichtung Romanistik, Universität des Saarlandes, Erasmus+ Evaluator, Teacher Trainer, già Collaboratrice del Dirigente Scolastico e Docente di Lingua e Cultura Tedesca presso il Liceo Veronica Gambara di Brescia.

Lascia un commento

Scopri di più da Italianistica, Didattica Innovativa, Internazionalizzazione

Abbonati ora per continuare a leggere e avere accesso all'archivio completo.

Continua a leggere