Visitors

free counters

Visitor online

You Are Here: Home» World News » US, World Bank aim to end violence in Pacific

Created: Thu, 19 May 09:33:05 UTC+0700 2011
Last Updated: 4 hours 53 minutes ago
The United States and World Bank are teaming up on an intiative to improve the lives of women in Papua New Guinea.

The Women's Empowerment Initiative in the Pacific Region is supported by Australia and New Zealand and aims to find ways to combat gender-based violence in the Pacific.

Australia has committed up to AUD$3 million over three years to support the initiative.

Next week, Papua New Guinea and the United States will co-host talks in Port Moresby with leaders from the Pacific on ways to improve maternal health, increase economic opportunities, and empower women.

The United States Ambassador-at-Large for Global Women's Issues, Melanne Verveer, said gender-based violence was a global epidemic and new solutions needed to be considered.

She said improving conditions in the Pacific could help end violence.

"Many of these practices are rooted in lack of economic opportunity, lack of status, lack of empowerment."

Ms Verveer said the upcoming talks in Papua New Guinea would focus on "healthy women, healthy economies".

"Where women are healthy and economies are healthier, we are certainly going to see less violence against women," she said.

Ms Verveer said the issues had to be addressed at the top level of government and at the grassroots level.

She said laws against violence needed to be enforced and perpetrators punished.

"We also need to change mindsets at the grassroots level and we certainly need to see men and boys playing a greater role in addressing these issues. We need more work at a community level in changing ways that people look at these issues," Ms Verveer said.

Ms Verveer announced the Women's Empowerment Initiative in the Pacific Region last year at the end of US secretary of state Hillary Clinton's Asia-Pacific tour.
Tags: World News

0 comments

Leave a Reply

Popular Posts