Human Rights

Sexual Violence

  • Women and Women's Rights
    Women Around the World: This Week
    Welcome to “Women Around the World: This Week,” a series that highlights noteworthy news related to women and U.S. foreign policy. This week’s post, covering October 26 to November 3, was compiled with support from Anne Connell and Alyssa Dougherty.
  • Gender
    Women Around the World: This Week
    Welcome to “Women Around the World: This Week,” a series that highlights noteworthy news related to women and U.S. foreign policy. This week’s post, covering October 20 to October 27, was compiled with support from Anne Connell and Susannah Dibble.
  • Women and Women's Rights
    Women's Participation in Peace and Security Processes
    This week marks the seventeen-year anniversary of the adoption of the landmark UN Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security. The international agreement acknowledges the disproportionate impact of armed conflict on women and girls and affirms the importance of women in conflict prevention, peace negotiations, peace-building, peacekeeping, humanitarian response and post-conflict reconstruction. To date, sixty-nine states have launched National Action Plans to implement the resolution. Learn more about women’s contributions to conflict prevention and resolution in these publications from the Women and Foreign Policy program.
  • Women and Women's Rights
    Countering Sexual Violence in Conflict
    A new report from the Women and Foreign Policy program and the Center for Preventive Action, launched this week, highlights the global security threat posed by conflict-related sexual violence and outlines policy steps that the U.S. government should take to prevent and respond to such violence. Armies and armed groups in conflicts around the world often subject noncombatants—particularly women and children—to sexual violence, such as rape, sexual slavery, and forced marriage. Despite international recognition of this devastating abuse as a crime against humanity, sexual violence continues to plague conflicts from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to Syria. The practice has also proliferated among extremist groups, including Boko Haram in Nigeria and the self-proclaimed Islamic State in Iraq and Syria, who use sexual violence as a tactic of terror and a form of currency in a shadow economy. And most recently, Burmese government forces reportedly have committed ethnically motivated rape and gang rape against women and girls amid escalating conflict in the Rakhine State. Rights groups assert that this sexual violence is not random or opportunistic, but is rather part of a systematic attack against the Rohingya minority.  Sexual violence in conflict is not simply a gross violation of human rights—it is also a security challenge. Wartime rape fuels displacement, weakens governance, and destabilizes communities, thereby inhibiting postconflict reconciliation and imperiling long-term stability.  Combating conflict-related sexual violence thus merits a higher place on the U.S. foreign policy agenda. Although the U.S. government has taken modest steps to address sexual violence in conflict under successive Republican and Democratic administrations, more action is needed.  The new report suggests that the current administration should require training on conflict-related sexual violence in U.S. security cooperation efforts; expand the number of women serving in militaries, police, and peacekeeping forces around the world; increase accountability for the crime of sexual violence; and undermine terrorist financing streams raised through the abduction of women and children. These steps will help the United States and its allies respond effectively to the security threat posed by conflict-related sexual violence and advance U.S. interests in peace and stability. Read the full report here >>  
  • Sexual Violence
    Countering Sexual Violence in Conflict
    Overview Armies and armed groups often subject noncombatants—particularly women and children—to conflict-related sexual violence, such as rape, sexual slavery, and forced marriage. Despite international recognition of this devastating abuse as a crime against humanity, sexual violence continues to plague conflicts from the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC) to Syria. This practice has also proliferated among extremist groups, including Boko Haram in Nigeria and the self-proclaimed Islamic State in Iraq and Syria. Additionally, sexual violence has tarnished the operations of peacekeepers charged with protecting civilians, thereby undermining the integrity and effectiveness of international peacekeeping institutions across the globe. Sexual violence in conflict is not simply a gross violation of human rights—it is also a security challenge. Wartime rape fuels displacement, weakens governance, and destabilizes communities, thereby inhibiting postconflict reconciliation and imperiling long-term stability. Combating conflict-related sexual violence merits a higher place on the U.S. foreign policy agenda. Although the U.S. government has taken modest steps to address sexual violence in conflict under successive Republican and Democratic administrations, more action is needed. To counter such violence, the Donald J. Trump administration should require training on conflict-related sexual violence in U.S. security cooperation efforts; expand the number of women serving in militaries, police, and peacekeeping forces around the world; increase accountability for the crime of sexual violence; and undermine terrorist financing streams raised through the abduction of women and children. These steps will help the United States and its allies respond effectively to the security threat posed by conflict-related sexual violence and advance U.S. interests in peace and stability.
  • Gender
    Women Around the World: This Week
    Welcome to “Women Around the World: This Week,” a series that highlights noteworthy news related to women and U.S. foreign policy. This week’s post, covering September 13 to September 22, was compiled with support from Becky Allen, Anne Connell, and Alyssa Dougherty.
  • Human Trafficking
    World Day Against Trafficking in Persons
    Learn more about modern human trafficking—and how it affects women and girls—through six publications from the Women and Foreign Policy program.
  • Gender
    Women Around the World: This Week
    Welcome to “Women Around the World: This Week,” a series that highlights noteworthy news related to women and U.S. foreign policy. This week’s post, covering July 22 to August 4, was compiled with support from Becky Allen, Alyssa Dougherty, and Kathryn Sachs. 
  • Sexual Violence
    Data for Development: The Case for Information, Not Just Data
    Voices from the Field features contributions from scholars and practitioners highlighting new research, thinking, and approaches to development challenges. This piece is authored by Daniela Ligiero, CEO and executive director of the Together for Girls partnership.
  • Maternal and Child Health
    Women Around the World: This Week
    Welcome to "Women Around the World: This Week," a series that highlights noteworthy news related to women and U.S. foreign policy. This week’s post, covering May 14 to May 19, was compiled with support from Becky Allen and Alyssa Dougherty.  U.S. State Department expands global health restrictions On Monday, the State Department released a guidance document on global health, dramatically expanding Reagan-era restrictions on U.S. aid related to reproductive health to affect all global health programs, including those focused reducing HIV-AIDS, malaria, and maternal and child health. The guidance document – entitled "Protecting Life in Global Health Assistance" – was issued under the auspices of a Presidential Memorandum promulgated at the start of the Trump administration. The guidance will, for the first time, extend restrictions beyond family planning programs to restrict funding to global health assistance furnished by all departments or agencies, explicitly including programs such as the President's Emergency Plan for AIDS Relief (PEPFAR) and the President's Malaria Initiative (PMI). In total, the rule is estimated to restrict almost $9 billion in global health aid, in comparison to around $600 million affected under President George W. Bush. Experts expressed alarm that the new policy would undermine HIV-AIDS prevention efforts—including the prevention of mother-to-child transmission of the virus—as well as programs to combat maternal mortality, among other priorities.  Ugandan peacekeepers accused of sexual exploitation This week, Ugandan peacekeepers tasked with finding warlord Joseph Kony in the Central African Republic (CAR) were accused of rape, sexual exploitation, and sexual slavery of young girls. According to UN records, more than thirty cases of allegations of abuse have been documented, and forty-four women and girls have been impregnated by members of the Ugandan forces. Both the Ugandan military and American Special Operations deny any knowledge of misconduct. Allegations of sexual abuse and exploitation in CAR are not unique to the Ugandan military; years of abuse by peacekeepers from countries including France, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Gabon, and Burundi resulted in an independent investigation into the issue in 2015. The resulting report produced a set of recommendations for the UN, including the creation of a Coordination Unit to oversee the UN response to sexual violence, establishment of a trust fund to provide specialized services to victims, and new mechanisms to ensure prosecution.         Pakistan government cracks down on abuse of girls  The Pakistani government has arrested numerous tribal leaders practicing vani – an illegal practice in which a father marries off his daughters to repay debts or settle village feuds. Recent reports from human rights workers, police officers, and regional media cite an increase in cases in rural communities, despite efforts from lawmakers to resolve disputes through government-appointed mediators. Although only twenty-eight cases of vani have been officially reported since January 2016, hundreds of incidents are estimated to occur annually, and some victims of the practice are as young as one year old. Local critics of the government’s crackdown – typically conservative tribal elders – consider vani to be a long-held tradition that prevents bloodshed, rather than a criminal offense that violates girls' human rights. 
  • Gender
    Women Around the World: This Week
    Welcome to “Women Around the World: This Week,” a series that highlights noteworthy news related to women and U.S. foreign policy. This week’s post, covering from May 6 to May 12, was compiled with support from Becky Allen, Anne Connell, and Loren Grier. Boko Haram releases kidnapped girls in Nigeria On Sunday, the Nigeria-based extremist group Boko Haram released eighty-two schoolgirls who had been kidnapped and held captive for three years. In a deal negotiated by the Nigerian government in collaboration with the International Committee of the Red Cross and the Swiss government, the girls were set free in exchange for the release of five top Boko Haram commanders. The freed girls numbered among the 276 female students kidnapped by Boko Haram militants from a boarding school in Chibok, Nigeria in 2014, which sparked an international movement and the #BringBackOurGirls social media campaign. The Nigerian government is engaged in ongoing talks to secure the release of the remaining 113 girls from Boko Haram camps in exchange for additional captured militants. The released girls have faced significant barriers to full reintegration into society, though the Nigerian government reportedly seeks to aid their transition by placing them in government-run care facilities to receive medical treatment and education.  Female political leadership in Rwanda Diane Rwigara, a leading Rwandan business woman and advocate for women’s economic advancement, announced this week that she will challenge sitting President Paul Kagame in the upcoming August election. Rwigara’s platform is focused on reducing income inequality and extreme poverty, encouraging youth employment, and championing a free press. She and other candidates face an uphill battle amidst President Kagame’s efforts to consolidate power in recent years. Rwigara would become the second woman in history to compete for the presidency in a nation that has seen tremendous gains in women’s political participation since the 1990s: Rwanda boasts the highest percentage of female parliamentarians of any nation in the world, with women now holding  61 percent of seats in the lower house of parliament, far surpassing the 30 percent quota enacted in the country’s new constitution. Prosecution of sexual violence in India This week, the Bombay high court upheld life sentences for eleven men found guilty in a high-profile gang rape, thereby ending a fifteen-year legal battle. The 2002 rape of Bilkis Bano occurred during the Gujarat riots, a spate of violence targeting Muslims; Bano was attempting to flee the violence when she was caught and brutally assaulted by men she had known since childhood. Although Bano reported the crime and could cite her attackers by name, local law enforcement and medical personnel ignored her initial report of the case, intimidated her, and allegedly destroyed relevant evidence. Five of those policemen and two of the doctors, who had earlier been cleared by the trial court, were also convicted by the high court this week. Bano’s case is hardly unique in India, where an estimated fifty-seven women are reportedly raped every day. Many of India’s reported sexual violence cases, however, never make it to court, and only 26 percent of those that do result in a conviction.    
  • Human Trafficking
    Sex Trafficking and the Refugee Crisis: Exploiting the Vulnerable
    Caroline O’Leary is an intern in the Center for Preventive Action at the Council on Foreign Relations. April was Sexual Assault Awareness Month, which brought a deserved spotlight to the 5,551 cases of human sex trafficking reported nationally in 2016. Across the globe, however, a parallel crisis gets far less attention: violent conflict—which creates weakened legal infrastructure and increases economic instability—has left tens of millions vulnerable to sex trafficking. The sexual abuse and trafficking of refugees is a little-acknowledged facet of the refugee crisis in Europe and the Middle East. However, it is a very real part of life for many forced to flee their homes because of violence from Syria and Iraq. The total number of people forcibly displaced by conflict reached 65.3 million by the end of 2015. These refugees face a dire economic situation; for instance, 90 percent of Syrian refugees are living below their host country’s national poverty line. As former Secretary of State John Kerry once noted, “Wherever we find poverty and lack of opportunity…we find not just vulnerability to trafficking, but zones of impunity where traffickers can prey on their victims.” Migration to Europe for work is considered a perilous necessity for many unable to support themselves or their families. According to the International Organization for Migration (IOM), at least 1,883 migrants have died so far in 2017—70 percent while attempting to cross the Mediterranean Sea. The conditions in which migrants travel can not only be deadly, but also open venues through which they can become ensnared in sex trafficking rings. In some circumstances, migrants voluntarily make the decision to take on sex work—which smugglers promise will be lucrative and not require foreign language skills or documentation—as a means of surviving financially. However, upon agreeing to this work, many are abused and treated as sex slaves as well as taken further from home, where they often fall deeper into poverty. Others are unaware of their coercion into the trade until it is too late. Smugglers promise safe passage into Europe in return for payments that run on average from $3,400 to $6,800, according to a 2015 Interpol report. However, smugglers frequently use physical and sexual abuse to demand more money from their victims than initially agreed upon. The IOM notes that this exchange often leads to sex trafficking, where victims are “repeatedly raped or forced to prostitute themselves in near slavery condition” in order to pay back their “debts.” Despairingly, refugee sex trafficking victims often then find themselves unable to report abuse due to their legal status, for fear that alerting authorities may result in their own arrest rather than that of their abuser. Child refugees are decidedly vulnerable as well. They currently account for more than half of the refugee population, and often find themselves parent-less and destitute. At least ten thousand unaccompanied minor refugees have been reported missing after reaching Europe, and many of them are believed to have fallen victim to trafficking and sexual exploitation. Europol has also found crossover between the gangs that help smuggle refugees into the European Union and those exploiting them for sex and slavery. Since this illegal trade takes place largely underground, it is difficult to craft responsive policy. However, a humanitarian crisis of this proportion demands attention and deserves the response of policymakers. To combat sex trafficking and abuse among refugees, the United States should: Increase contributions to refugee resettlement programs to provide alternative work options and asylum in refugees’ new home countries. While potentially highly impactful, this would be difficult to implement due given the current political climate in the United States. The massive scope of the population in need of resettlement is also a significant challenge. Continue to encourage international reflection periods similar to what the European Union has. Such periods provide a reprieve from deportation to allow identified sex victims to seek emergency health and aid services while being legally classified as victims of crime, thereby mitigating any concerns victims may have regarding reporting their abuse. Strengthen legal systems for victimized refugees in order to empower them to get in contact with law enforcement authorities, should they wish to. The benefits of doing so contribute not only to individual refugee empowerment, but also the long-term goal of bringing down sex trafficking rings. Sex trafficking is just one symptom of an enormous refugee crisis—the largest since World War II. To respond to such an issue will take years of cohesive anti-sex-trafficking strategy on the parts of governments around the world—particularly around areas of conflict. Implementing policies that streamline the legal aid and rehabilitation of victims, however, is an achievable way to humanize refugees in a time of uncertainty and fear.