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Humanitarian aid failing to be feminist as funding for women lags behind

by Nellie Peyton | @nelliepeyton | Thomson Reuters Foundation
Monday, 10 June 2019 16:30 GMT

Women are pictured in a camp for internally displaced people on the grounds of the Saint Sauveur church in the capital Bangui, Central African Republic, November 25, 2015. REUTERS/Siegfried Modola

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'The statistics clearly show that women and girls are doubly disadvantaged in humanitarian settings,' said the International Rescue Committee's president

By Nellie Peyton

DAKAR, June 10 (Thomson Reuters Foundation) - About 0.1% of humanitarian funding goes to addressing violence against women and girls worldwide, charities said on Monday, prompting calls for a new "feminist" approach to foreign aid.

Less than $2 was allocated to each woman or girl at risk of rape or abuse in conflict zones from 2016-2018, out of $41.5 billion in humanitarian aid, said the International Rescue Committee (IRC) and women's rights group VOICE in a report.

"The statistics clearly show that women and girls are doubly disadvantaged in humanitarian settings," said IRC President David Miliband.

"To compound the problem, the world is looking the other way," he added in a speech on Monday at Georgetown University.

One in five women who have fled home experiences sexual violence, while nine in 10 countries with the highest rates of child marriage are also wracked by conflict, said the report.

Two-thirds of funding requests for gender-based violence programmes went unmet in the last three years, it said, while even the requests would have fallen far short of the need.

In Central African Republic, where rape has been widely documented as a weapon of war, no funding for gender-based violence work was recorded at all, it said.

In Nigeria, only $3.8 million was allocated for women and girls out of $40 million requested by the United Nations.

"We need to engage more systematically with the questions of power that are raised by feminist thinking," said Miliband, Britain's former foreign minister, adding that meant working harder to support women within and outside the organisation.

He called on other humanitarian agencies to create a gender equality scorecard to measure progress, and to prioritize women's voices in designing and assessing programmes.

Some countries, such as Sweden, France and Canada have announced feminist foreign aid policies in the last five years, pledging funds specifically to target gender equality, said Miliband, but they are the exceptions.

An index released last week showed not one country is on track to reach gender equality by 2030, one of the goals set by the United Nations.

"This report from IRC is welcome and greatly overdue," said Yasmeen Hassan, global director of women's rights group Equality Now in an email.

"Women's rights organizations have decried the lack of work to prevent and address gender-based violence - including sexual violence, sex trafficking, domestic violence, and 'child' and forced marriage - in humanitarian settings where it is sorely needed."

(Reporting by Nellie Peyton, Editing by Claire Cozens. Please credit the Thomson Reuters Foundation, the charitable arm of Thomson Reuters, that covers humanitarian news, women's and LGBT+ rights, human trafficking, property rights, and climate change. Visit http://news.trust.org)

Our Standards: The Thomson Reuters Trust Principles.

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