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Showing posts with the label adults

Gender-based violence in Ukraine

There is an urgent need to enhance the capacities of Ukraine to address the issue of gender-based violence adequately. A three-day assessment mission to the country evidences it. Accompanied by international experts, many NGO, like WAVE (Women Against Violence Europe), met with government stakeholders and representatives of civil society and the international community in Kyiv. Experts saw that preventing and combating gender-based violence and violence against women is an indispensable prerequisite for personal safety and security and thus a major contribution to the stability of a country. Ukraine must undertake efforts to tackle this issue in a comprehensive and inclusive way. Europe’s NGO stand ready to assist the country in these endeavours." The tensions and hostilities have had negative consequences on the prevalence of domestic violence. Internally displaced women in particular have been experiencing increased incidences of violence with reported cases to NG...
OSCE Special Representative promotes sustainable assistance to children without parental care in Eastern Europe MINSK, 3 April 2015 – Preparing children to live independently after they leave state-run boarding schools is a key step in combating human trafficking in minors,”  said on Friday OSCE Special Representative and Co-ordinator for Combating Trafficking in Human Beings, Ambassador Madina Jarbussynova. “Teaching life skills is something that we have stressed in our ongoing project for children without parental care,” Jarbussynova added. “It provides them with the tools, as well as the necessary self-confidence, to contribute to their societies as working adults.” The Special Representative made the remarks at the conclusion of a two-day roundtable with leading experts from Ukraine, Moldova and Belarus who gathered in Minsk to exchange good practices and share their expertise. Social workers, government officials and NGO representatives form a core group of experts tha...

Free primary healthcare for illegal immigrants

Illegal immigrants living in Spain will once again have the right to free primary healthcare with a general practitioner (GP), after losing access in 2012.Undocumented residents will not be getting their health cards back, however. Health Minister Alfonso Alonso said the Popular Party (PP) government has decided to backtrack on its earlier decision “for public health reasons,” because it is “more practical” and “in order to not saturate the emergency services.” Under the health reform of 2012, free access to all public health services was taken away for illegal immigrants. Instead, general care was restricted to minors and pregnant women, although any migrant could still visit a hospital’s emergency room in the event of an accident or if they had an infectious disease. “We see it very clearly now, and we are working on it,” said the minister in an interview with Efe news agency. “It makes no sense for them not to be seen in primary care.” The decision attracted strong cri...

About International Women’s Day.

Women make up half of the population. After a war, they should be actively involved in any changes and solutions that shape and affect their society, including conflict prevention and resolution. Experience with many conflict resolutions has demonstrated that it is of crucial importance to allow for women's full and equal participation in peace and security matters. The inclusion of women increases the likelihood of achieving sustainable peace. Unfortunately, women are often not seen as stakeholders in peace processes, even though they are affected by conflict as well as men. The world needs to move beyond seeing women as passive civilians or mere victims and recognize the crucial role of women in rebuilding societies and promoting peace. Women must play a role as decision makers in all phases of conflict resolution, from prevention to crisis management to peace talks to post-conflict reconciliation. The fifteenth anniversary of the adoption UN Security Council Re...

Terrorist attacks in Copenhagen

I condemn attacks that killed a security guard at a synagogue and a participant in a freedom of speech event in Copenhagen on Saturday. I am shocked by the terrorist attacks in Copenhagen on the weekend. While such attacks affect us all, they have a particularly strong impact on the daily lives of Jewish people; now is the time to stand together against these crimes based on hatred, including those based on anti-Semitism. Government must   take all appropriate efforts to meet the security needs of Jewish communities.  Such attacks are a strong reminder of the need to promote and protect human rights and fundamental freedoms – including the freedom of speech – and for effective responses to all bias, discrimination and violence targeting different communities. Saturday’s shooting followed the killing, on 7 January 2015, of 12 people in an attack on the Charlie Hebdo Magazine, of a police officer on the next day, and then of four people during an attac...

Charlie Hebdo

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I  condemn a terrorist attack on French satirical magazine Charlie Hebdo in Paris today that left at least 12 dead of which 10 are Charlie Hebdo staff, including cartoonists Charb, Cabu, Tignous and Wolinski. Several people were wounded . This is an unprecedented attack on media freedom and freedom of expression, My condolences go to the families and colleagues of the victims.” At least two gunmen entered the editorial offices and opened fire before fleeing. Swift condemnation and reaction came from top French authorities. This is the deadliest attack in the history of the French press and the third attack on French newspapers in recent years. The offices of Charlie Hebdo were also fire bombed in 2011. In November 2013 a gunman opened fire in the offices of the newspaper Libération.

Real men never hit women

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Real men never hit women: OSCE Mission in Kosovo kicks off anti-domestic violence campaign. In PRISHTINË/PRIŠTINA, today, the OSCE Mission in Kosovo kicks off a public information campaign against domestic violence with a press conference in Prishtinë/Priština. The campaign dubbed “Real men never hit women” features two professional fighters: boxer Armend Xhoxhaj and kick-boxer Marko Božović. It includes TV spots and posters in both Albanian and Serbian languages. It will run for four weeks including the 16 Days of Activism against Violence against Women. The campaign aims to help prevent domestic violence, and urges the public and victims to report any cases when they occur to the Victim Advocates helpline: 0800 11 11 2.      The Head of the OSCE Regional Centre Prishtinë/Priština, Neil Tobin; Manager of the Victim Advocacy and Protection Office, Basri Kastrati; and Chief of the Domestic Violence Unit within Kosovo Police, Tahire Haxholli...

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Safety and security in cities in Spain

In Spain, in many cities, women, adults and people with a disability still have a lot to worry about when it comes to their personal safety. The local authorities and city management have a crucial role to play in the prevention of violence against them, both in public and private spaces, whether it be harassment or attacks outside the home, or domestic abuse behind closed doors. Local authorities can improve the city’s physical environment- for example, through better street lighting, building better alternatives to dark and secluded walkways, or even positioning bus stops in safer areas. Effective interventions often promote consultation and participation from themselves. Local governments can also make cities safer by mainstreaming gender in their crime prevention policies and programmes, especially through sensitisation campaigns, training and development of services for people affected by violence. These programmes have a role in changing attitudes and behaviour that ...