| Fact Sheet
Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration
Washington, DC
November 20, 2006
Helping to Break the Cycle: Prevention
and Response to Gender-Based Violence
An Afghan woman, exchanged by her father for a new wife when she
was eight and raped daily, wants to save her daughter from a similar
life. A Sudanese woman risks rape if she leaves her camp to look
for food or firewood, but her family
must eat. A Karen woman fled conflict in Burma years ago, but still
endures
violence in her home.
Our Commitment
Gender Based Violence (GBV) is a feature of virtually every recently
concluded
and current armed conflict. GBV may increase during war and conflict,
in
parallel with poverty and despair - particularly in refugee situations.
As part of the U.S. Department of State's transformational diplomacy
efforts,
the Bureau of Population, Refugees, and Migration (PRM) has been
at the
forefront in protecting and assisting refugees and victims of conflict,
particularly refugee women and girls.
PRM-sponsored programs focus on four key goals: awareness raising,
prevention, response, and capacity building. PRM seeks to challenge
the ambivalence in some societies toward GBV, examine and address
its root causes, and to involve the
entire community in preventing GBV while meeting survivors' special
medical,
social, psychosocial, and legal needs.
Since 2000, PRM has provided over $14.7 million for specific GBV
prevention and
response projects through international organizations, such as the
United
Nations High Commissioner for Refugees (UNHCR) and non-governmental
organizations (NGOs). In Fiscal Year 2006 alone, PRM directed over
$4.4 million to GBV programs. PRM also works on global efforts to
eliminate trafficking in
persons, and funds anti-trafficking programs worldwide through the
International Organization for Migration (IOM).
In combating GBV, PRM seeks to break the cycle of violence, to empower
survivors to become agents of their own protection, and to promote
human
dignity, a key U.S. foreign policy goal. PRM funds projects that
raise
awareness of GBV in the refugee community, and educates police,
guards, NGO,
and community workers about the impact of GBV, and about legal protection
and services that are available to help survivors. PRM also supports
literacy and education initiatives for refugee women and other activities
to increase their
income potential through livelihoods and marketable job-skills training.
PRM Sponsored Program Highlights:
* Community-based education programs among refugee communities in
Eritrea,
Moscow, Pakistan, and Thailand for Karen refugees.
* Courses in tolerance, democracy, and human rights for children
in Gaza,
West Bank, Syria, Lebanon and Jordan.
* Basic education, rights awareness, and vocational training for
Afghan women
and girls.
* An Anti-Female Genital Cutting program for refugee camps in Kenya.
* Health and psychosocial support including counseling for refugees
and
returnees in Liberia and Ethiopia.
* Refugee and internally displaced women's empowerment programs
in several
countries in Latin America and Africa.
* Counseling, mediation, legal services, and community sensitization
in
Mundri, southern Sudan.
* An Ambassador's Fund project to support vulnerable teen mothers
in
Budumburam refugee camp in Ghana.
GBV Programming: A Proven Impact
PRM's efforts to mainstream Gender-Based Violence have increased
the focus,
dialogue, research, and response to GBV among our implementing partners,
while PRM's targeted interventions have had a significant positive
impact in refugee communities. A PRM-sponsored program in refugee
camps in Kenya has encouraged an increasing number of girls and
families to renounce the harmful traditional practice of female
genital cutting (FGC). In 2005, as part of this program, 207 girls
and their families vowed not to undergo FGC. This number is expected
to
double in 2006.
Another PRM-funded project has focused on implementation of the
Kenya Code , in cooperation with the Government of Kenya, on the
prevention of sexual abuse and exploitation by agency staff members.
In 2006-2007, the project will focus on
several initiatives, including awareness-raising for refugee populations
and
aid workers, dissemination of educational films, as well as instituting
mechanisms within the police force to create awareness and advocate
against
sexual exploitation and abuse.
PRM has also supported a legal aid clinic in Guinea for GBV cases,
95 percent
of which were resolved in the clients' interests. In Thailand ,
PRM funds
several GBV awareness programs. GBV coordinators in camps work with
the
community to improve social support and the short and long-term
needs of
victims. Social stigma prevents many from reporting GBV, but in
one particular program, the number of reported cases doubled within
months of starting a GBV
community education program. A very successful project in Afghanistan
will
focus its activities in 2006-2007 on the role of in-laws and in
engaging men in
the fight against gender-based violence.
"I know that I have to help my daughter achieve her goals,
help her
aspire higher in life and allow her to choose a husband of her own
choice&
hellip;I could very easily have been just one of the millions of
voiceless,
faceless [women who have been victims of violence] in our community.
But this
program has given me a purpose in life and conviction to work with
my inner
strength"
- Afghan Program Participant.
Related Links for More Information:
PRM Website:
http://www.state.gov/g/prm
USG Protection Statement at UNHCR's 2006 EXCOM:
http://www.usmission.ch/Press2006/1004EllenSauerbrey.htm
UNHCR Website on refugee women:
http://www.unhcr.org/protect/3b83a48d4.html
UNHCR's Operational Protection in Camps and Settlements:
A Reference Guide
of Good Practices in the Protection of Refugees and Other Persons
of Concern June 2006: http://www.unhcr.org/cgi-bin/texis/vtx/home/opendoc.pdf?tbl=RSDLEGAL&id=44b381994
USG Office to Monitor and Combat Trafficking in Persons:
http://www.state.gov/g/tip
Gender-Based Violence Bibliography:
http://www.rhrc.org/resources/gbv/bib/index.cfm
UN Security Council Resolution 1325:
http://www.womenwarpeace.org/toolbox/1325.pdf
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