Today
we mark the first United Nations observance of the International Day for
the Elimination of Violence against Women. It gives us an occasion to focus
our fight against gender-based violence in all its forms -- whether it
be domestic violence, rape, sexual harassment, torture and abuse of women
prisoners, or violence against women in armed conflict. It calls upon us
to raise public awareness of this global scourge in all its forms, and
to ensure that wherever it occurs, it will be met with global condemnation.
Since the birth of the United Nations,
there has been increasing recognition that the enjoyment of human rights
is essential to the well-being and development of the individual, the community,
the nation and the world. There has been increasing awareness of
violations of the rights of women and girls. And yet violence against women
-- one of the most shameful of all human rights violations -- continues
to be widespread. It knows no boundaries of geography, culture or wealth.
It occurs in times of armed conflict and in peace, in the home, in the
workplace and in the streets. It stands in the way of our progress towards
equality, development, peace and all human rights for all.
In our efforts to confront violence
against women, we have made some headway at the international and national
levels. Member States of the United Nations have adopted the Declaration
on the Elimination of Violence against Women, which outlines strategies
for its elimination. The Statutes of the Ad Hoc International Tribunals
for the former Yugoslavia, Rwanda and Sierra Leone, and the 1998 Statute
of the International Criminal Court, include gender-based crimes against
women in times of conflict. There has been worldwide mobilisation against
harmful traditional practices such as so-called "honour killings" -- which
I prefer to call "shame killings".
Member States have enacted legislation
banning violence against women -- legislation covering the home, workplace
and society at large. They have introduced protection services and trained
professionals to take effective action. They have launched campaigns to
make all sectors of society understand that violence against women is unacceptable
in any form.
But we must do much more. When Member
States came together in June this year to review progress in implementing
the Beijing Platform for Action, they pledged themselves to a special focus
on violence against women in meeting the goals of gender equality, development
and peace. They resolved to revise laws, prosecute perpetrators and
continue to research the root causes of violence against women as a means
to creating effective programmes against it. They agreed to consider
an international campaign to send the message of “zero tolerance” far and
wide.
Today, let us recall that action
to eliminate violence against women is the responsibility of all of us:
the United Nations family, Member States, civil society and individual
women and men. This day, and the Sixteen Days of Activism against
Gender Violence that we launch today, give us an opportunity to start building
a new Millennium free from violence against women and girls; an age in
which all humanity knows that when it comes to violence against women,
there are no grounds for tolerance and no tolerable excuses.