The devastating reality for women caught in disaster zones.
I was in Japan when the news of Cyclone Pam’s destruction broke. The timing was uncanny. There we were several thousand people from all over the world who had congregated in Sendai for a global meeting on how the international community can prepare for disasters over the next 15 years.
Then Pam struck Vanuatu, a cruel but timely reminder of how critical the meeting was.
Violence against women is a global epidemic. It happens everywhere, all over the world, all the time. However, what many people don’t realise is that when an emergency hits and in the following period, violence against women increases.
Violence against women increases everywhere in an emergency zone. In family homes. In public spaces. In camps where people are crammed together. When an entire community is struggling to cope with the stress of a disaster, women become the objects of male frustration.
Opinion: “Every time we sing these lyrics, violence against women becomes more mainstream.”
In responding to disasters, protecting women from violence is a critical priority. Sadly, it is frequently overlooked.
We will almost certainly see this in Vanuatu. The UN Office of Humanitarian Affairs is warning that in this crisis, increased levels of violence against women are of particular concern.
Responses to disasters like Cyclone Pam must, must, must include the protection of women. Too often, we see full-blown emergency responses that don’t specifically address women’s needs at all, except perhaps for a few sanitary pads in the hygiene kits distributed en masse.
Related: Vanuatu has been devastated by Cyclone Pam. Up to 40 may be dead.