Shafaq News/ The Ministry of Health in Iraq and the World Health Organization (WHO) launched the first Gender-Based Violence (GBV) Strategic Plan 2022-2026 on 31 January 2022.
The plan will provide the strategic vision and the operational directions for better implementation and coordination of sustainable interventions related to the health system response to GBV to reduce its short and long health consequences.
Dr. Rana Mohammad Ali, GBV Officer for WHO Iraq, indicated that the strategic plan aims to integrate comprehensive and well-coordinated GBV health services into health facilities at the primary, secondary and tertiary levels.
"The plan also intends to increase community awareness on the prevention of GBV and strives to fight stigmatization while strengthening the integration of GBV into the humanitarian and emergency health response," she added.
The strategic plan is designed to gradually cover all provinces of Iraq, including the Kurdistan Region-Iraq (KR-I), with a flexible and ad-hoc plan tailored to each province's specific needs and situation.
"This strategy focuses on reducing the impact of gender-based violence by ensuring adequate physical and mental care is available and accessible for all GBV survivors," said Dr. Ahmed Zouiten, WHO Representative in Iraq. "We will need to work collectively on correcting the root causes of the violence itself and ensuring that our girls and boys are educated correctly and sensitized on the respect for one another."
Gender-based violence worsens during humanitarian crises as vulnerability increases, especially when accountability decreases. Furthermore, the pre-existing gender and social inequalities affecting women and girls were further exacerbated during the COVID-19 pandemic and increased different forms of GBV, particularly domestic violence.
The Minister of Health H.E Dr. Hani Bader Al-Aqaby assured the importance of having a strategic plan for GBV. It is considered the central pillar to provide curative, preventive, and psychological services to survivors of gender-based violence.
"Ministry of Health is committed to being an active part of an institutional change to approach GBV prevention and response in coordination with WHO and civil society organizations," said H.E Dr. Hani Bader Al-Aqaby.
In Iraq, About 1.32 million people are at risk of different forms of GBV, and more than 75% of them are women and adolescent girls. In addition, 77% of GBV incidents are linked to domestic violence. The recently-launched WHO global violence against women report estimates a prevalence of 26% of lifetime intimate partner violence among ever-married/partnered women aged 15–49 in Iraq.
The United Nations defines violence against women as "any act of gender-based violence that results in, or is likely to result in, physical, sexual, or mental harm or suffering to women, including threats of such acts, coercion or arbitrary deprivation of liberty, whether occurring in public or private life."