By Roger Nokes | Communications Manager
A year after two devastating earthquakes struck Nepal, UNFPA has gone deeper than addressing only its direct consequences. UNFPA’s work ensuring the health and dignity of women and girls after the disaster has begun to correct long-term issues of gender-based violence.
As in most crisis settings, the earthquake increased rates of violence; however, abuse was already pervasive before the quake hit, while the resources for women experiencing it were scarce. As part of its response, UNFPA helped establish 14 Female Friendly Spaces in the districts hardest hit. Over the past year, these 14 facilities have reached more than 410,000 women.
“As the fabric of society broke down, insecurity and violence against women went up,” says Giulia Vallese, UNFPA’s representative in Nepal. “The deeper work to tackle the attitudes and beliefs that fuel violence against women is just getting going, and there’s far more to do.” UNFPA’s Female Friendly Spaces provide shelter as well as physical, emotional, and psychological support for victims of sexual and gender-based violence.
“We faced a lot of resistance when we started all this,” says a member of Nepal's Women’s Human Rights Protection Network, a UNFPA partner. “I was threatened, and many men thought we would make their lives more difficult by helping women think differently. But after they came here, they started to understand and to work with.”
In addition to Female Friendly Spaces, UNFPA has provided the following services:
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