Spotlight: Punished For Being Female
Bob Herbert / The New York Times
The report, a compilation of many studies from around the world, should have been seen as the latest dispatch from that permanent world war - the war against women all over the planet. Instead, the news media greeted its shocking contents with a collective yawn.
The war
analogy is not an overstatement. In many parts of the world, men beat, torture, rape and
kill women with impunity. In Ciudad Juárez, a Mexican city on the
Each year
thousands of wives in
In
While it's undoubtedly true that men maim and kill other men in astonishing numbers, what I'm talking about here is the way that women, by the millions, are systematically targeted for attack because they are women.
In some
cases the sexual violence comes in vast, sickening waves. Just think, for example, of
More than 130 million girls and women are living with the consequences of genital mutilation, and many others have died from this barbaric practice. Jessica Neuwirth, the president of Equality Now, an international women's rights organization, said, "Everyone who's been cut knows someone who died from the cutting. They die from bleeding, or later from infection, or sometime later in life they have enormous health problems."
The litany
of serious abuses against women and girls can seem endless: child marriages, forced
marriages, kidnapping and forced prostitution, sex slavery. According to the UN report,
"A study in
The most
common form of serious abuse against women and girls around the globe is violence by
intimate partners. Huge percentages of female murder victims, even in such developed
countries as
A study of
young, female murder victims in the
The UN report tells us what we should already have concluded: that this pervasive violence against women, "whether perpetrated by the state and its agents, or by family members or strangers, in the public or private sphere, in peacetime or in times of conflict," is unacceptable.
Not only
are we not doing enough to counter this wholesale destruction of the lives of so many
women and girls, we're not even paying close attention. There are women's movements in
even the smallest countries fighting against the violence and other forms of abuse. But
they are underfunded and get very little support from those in a position to help. (Even
in
There was a time when activists cried out for our consciousness to be raised. It's not too late. We can start by recognizing that the systematic subordination and brutalization of women and girls around the world is, in fact, occurring - and that we need to do something about it.