abuse in residential homes for disabled children

Tough new action to tackle violence against women and girls as government marks 16 Days of Activism

New measures designed to tackle online violence against women and girls are announced today at the start of this year’s 16 Days of Activism Against Gender-Based Violence.

The project, called Safe Online: Preventing Technology-Facilitated Gender-Based Violence (TFGBV) and to be backed by more than £27m of UK-government funding, will help to support survivors of online violence and abuse, gather data to strengthen our understanding of this emerging threat, and minimise women’s exposure to harmful content by working with national regulators.

85% of women globally have witnessed or experienced online abuse and violence, including harassment, stalking and hateful misogynistic content. Today’s announcement shows the UK is determined to work globally to counter this threat to women and girls.

Minister for Development Anneliese Dodds has also announced three new partnerships with women’s rights organisations today, to examine how media and technology can prevent violence against women and girls – rather than facilitate it.

CREAW in Kenya, Soul City Institute and Reach Digital Health in South Africa will work in partnership with the UK government’s What Works to Prevent Violence programme to scale-up approaches on the most effective ways to prevent violence against women and girls. Working closely with local women’s rights organisations, the programme will pioneer new violence prevention approaches and scale-up approaches proven to be effective in countries such as Uganda, Eswatini, Somalia and Pakistan.

Backed by £67.5 million, the programme represents the first global effort to systematically scale-up violence prevention efforts and is the largest investment by any single donor in preventing violence against women and girls globally.

The UK recently announced £5m of funding to tackle child marriage at the Violence Against Children conference in Colombia and published a new report examining the links between violence against women and climate change at COP29 in Baku. The Minister of State for Women and Equalities and Minister of State for Development, Anneliese Dodds said:

“This government is committed to tackling the epidemic of misogyny and violence against women and girls, which destroys lives and scars communities.

This violence does not stop at our border – nor should our action to stop it.

Increasingly, online spaces are being used to perpetrate violence rather than prevent it- and so we need to work together to understand this abuse and what works to stop it.”

Lord Collins, in his first engagement since being appointed the Prime Minister’s Special Representative for Preventing Sexual Violence in Conflict (PSVI) will also attend the International Alliance on PSVI Conference in Colombia.

He will commit the UK to work with partners to drive international action to tackle conflict-related sexual violence (CRSV), which disproportionally affects women and girls around the world.

The International Alliance on PSVI was launched by the UK in 2023 and remains the only group focused specifically on strengthening international action to tackle CRSV and support survivors. The Prime Minister’s Special Representative for Preventing Sexual Violence in Conflict and Minister of State for Africa, Lord Collins said:

“There are more countries in the world today engaged in conflict than at any time since World War II and a 50% increase in incidences of conflict-related sexual violence (CRSV) globally in the last year.

As the Prime Minister’s Special Representative for Preventing Sexual Violence in Conflict, I am determined to drive forward the UK’s leadership on this issue, working with partners in Colombia and around the world to reduce conflict-related sexual violence, support survivors and bring perpetrators to justice.”

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