Intensification of efforts to eliminate all forms of violence against women
A/RES/67/144
5.
Also welcomes the efforts and contributions at the local, national,
regional and international levels to eliminate all forms of violence against women,
including by the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women
and the Special Rapporteur on violence against women, its causes and consequences;
Expresses its appreciation for the progress achieved in the
6.
Secretary-General’s 2008–2015 campaign “UNiTE to End Violence against Women”
and the regional components of the campaign, and stresses the need to accelerate the
implementation of concrete follow-up activities by the United Nations system to end
all forms of violence against women;
Welcomes the contributions already made by States, the private sector
7.
and other donors to the United Nations Trust Fund in Support of Actions to End
Violence against Women, while stressing the importance of further funding in order
to meet the annual target of 100 million United States dollars by 2015;
Strongly condemns all acts of violence against women and girls, whether
8.
those acts are perpetrated by the State, by private persons or by non-State actors,
including business enterprises, and calls for the elimination of all forms of
gender-based violence in the family, within the general community and where
perpetrated or condoned by the State;
Recognizes that all human rights are universal, indivisible and
9.
interdependent and interrelated and that the international community must treat
human rights globally in a fair and equal manner, on the same footing and with the
same emphasis, and stresses that, while the significance of national and regional
particularities and various historical, cultural and religious backgrounds must be
borne in mind, it is the duty of States regardless of their political, economic and
cultural systems to promote and protect all human rights and fundamental freedoms;
10. Stresses that it is important that States strongly condemn all forms of
violence against women and refrain from invoking any custom, tradition or religious
consideration to avoid their obligations with respect to its elimination as set out in
the Declaration on the Elimination of Violence against Women;9
11. Also stresses that States have the obligation, at all levels, to promote and
protect all human rights and fundamental freedoms for all, including women and
girls, and must exercise due diligence to prevent, investigate, prosecute and punish
the perpetrators of violence against women and girls and eliminate impunity and
should ensure protection, including adequate enforcement by police and the judiciary
of civil remedies, orders of protection and criminal sanctions, and provision of
shelters, psychosocial services, counselling and other types of support services, in
order to avoid revictimization, and that to do so contributes to the enjoyment of
human rights and fundamental freedoms by women subjected to violence;
12. Reaffirms that the persistence of armed conflicts in various parts of the
world is a major impediment to the elimination of all forms of violence against
women, and, bearing in mind that armed and other types of conflicts and terrorism
and hostage-taking still persist in many parts of the world and that aggression,
foreign occupation and ethnic and other types of conflicts are an ongoing reality,
affecting women and men in nearly every region, calls upon all States and the
international community to place particular focus on the plight, and give priority
attention and increased assistance to relieving the suffering, of women and girls
living in such situations and to ensure that, where violence is committed against
them, all perpetrators of such violence are duly investigated and, as appropriate,
prosecuted and punished in order to end impunity, while stressing the need to
respect international humanitarian law and human rights law;
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