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RESOLUTION 1325
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Ethiopia: Domestic violence rampant,
says UNFPA
October 12, 2005 (IRIN) - Domestic violence is so rampant in Ethiopia
that nine out of ten women think their husbands are justified in
beating them, a UN report released on Wednesday said.
The report, compiled by the UN Population Fund (UNFPA), said the
women believed it was in order to be punished, especially when a
wife went out without telling her spouse, neglected the children
or prepared food badly.
"Violence against women has long been shrouded in a culture
of silence," Monique Rakotomalala, the UNFPA representative
in Ethiopia, said at the launch of a report titled: "State
of the World's Population, the Promise of Equality".
The report focuses on the plight of women across the globe. It found
that in Egypt, 94 percent of women thought it was acceptable to
be beaten, as did 91 percent in Zambia.
According to the report, women in Ethiopia face terrible hardship,
with more than 25,000 women dying during childbirth each year and
50,000 facing disabilities during birth.
Only six percent of women have any kind of skilled help during their
birth. Women also suffer higher levels of HIV infection than men
and are less likely to enrol in schools - just 16 percent make it
into secondary education.
"Regrettably, a lot of women die during pregnancy. A large
number of girls are subjected to harmful traditional practices on
the pretext of culture and girls are married too early, without
their consent and often to people they do not know," Hannah
Abate, a senior gender expert with the government's women's affairs
office, said.
Women, she added, bore the brunt of poverty, disease and inequality
in Ethiopia, yet they made up 30 percent of the workforce, often
carrying out backbreaking tasks for up to 15 hours a day.
"We need to put women and girls at the heart of our development
efforts," Rakotomalala stressed.
"Every investment made in women and girls helps ensure gender
equality."
The new health minister, Tewodros Adhanom, said in a statement that
overcoming reproductive health problems were inextricably linked
to achieving the UN Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) by 2015.
"The lives of women and girls are critical if we are to achieve
the MDGs," he said.
Saying it needed US $200 billion a year to tackle gender inequality
and improve reproductive health across the world - which would in
turn help reduce poverty - UNFPA noted that reproductive health
problems were the leading cause of illness among women aged 15 to
44.
The report was released as the UN in Ethiopia began a 12-day celebration
of its 60th anniversary. The event is expected to highlight the
importance of meeting the MDGs.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=49498&SelectRegion=Horn_of_Africa&SelectCountry=ETHIOPIA
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