Editor in Chief: Moh. Reza Huwaida Friday, March 29th, 2024

New Strategy Launched to Effectively Implement EVAW Law

New Strategy Launched to Effectively Implement EVAW Law

KABUL - The Ministry of Women's Affairs on Monday launched a national strategy and action plan aimed at ensuring the Elimination of Violence against Women (EVAW) Law is effectively implemented so that more women have access to shelter, protection services and justice, and contribute to ending the impunity of perpetrators.
The launch is part of the 16 Days of Activism against Gender-based Violence.
The law was passed by a presidential decree in 2009 and criminalizes 22 acts of violence against women and harmful practices including child marriage, forcing or prohibiting marriage, forced self-immolation, rape and beating.
It also emphasizes government's role in the protection of women and prosecution of perpetrators, requiring the police to register cases of violence against women and courts and prosecutors to prosecute them.
UN Women said in a statement that while the EVAW Law is increasingly being used to seek justice, there needs to be a better understanding both of the law and of service providers' responsibilities when it comes to providing safe, confidential, coordinated survivor-centered assistance, and building confidence in the formal justice systems.
Globally, violence against women and girls is one of the most pervasive human rights violations and one of the least punished crimes.
In Afghanistan women and girls are regularly exposed to violence in public and private spaces, UN Women stated.
Girls are prevented from going to school and women have little access to the healthcare they need, while human rights defenders and organizations providing support services to women survivors have themselves become targets of violence and harassment, their statement read.
Delbar Nazari, Minister for Women's Affairs, said the EVAW strategy and National Action Plan outlines the way forward when it comes to strengthening oversight and coordination among stakeholders and advocating for the creation of an environment free from violence.
"As a government and a nation we have been making progress when it comes to ending violence against women in Afghanistan, but there is still much more to be done," Nazari said.
"The EVAW Law is a landmark legislation and this strategy and action plan are essential steps in helping us to ensure that it has the required effect on the ground," she said.
The strategy and action plan were designed to address current concerns about women's lack of access to quality services, emergency safety, security, judicial and healthcare responses, as well as the long and arduous trial process, challenges with forensic evidence collection, and the need for forward looking
UN Women provided technical and financial support in the development of the Strategy and Action Plan.
Meanwhile, Elzira Sagynbaeva, country representative for UN Women Afghanistan said: "Around the world we see women who experience violence being victimized twice – firstly when they are subjected to violence and secondly when they are denied access to services and justice."
"That's why this strategy and action
plan are so important; they lay out a clear roadmap for ensuring that the EVAW Law remains a meaningful tool in creating an Afghanistan free of violence against women."
The 16 Days of Activism against gender-based violence is an annual global campaign aimed at raising awareness about the causes and consequences of violence against women, while also mobilizing action to end it. The campaign runs from November 25 to December 10. (Tolonews)