“The 16 Days of Activism, gives all of us an opportunity to popularise the need to protect women and girls especially in Kurdistan where we have seen women and girls being targeted with all sorts of violence by ISIL. The 16 days is the reminder to all of us to do something extra for the women and girls”, said Her Excellency Pakshkan Zangana, the President of High Council of Women. “Violence against women is not our fate, it is not our destiny and it can be stopped, we need to work together to realise this”.
On the other hand, the Prime Minister of the Kurdistan Region of Iraq, Mr. Nechirvan Barzani, pledged the Kurdistan Regional Government’s continued commitment and effort to stop violence against women which has been demonstrated through various policies and laws in the Region including, among others, the establishment of the Directorate for Combating Violence, and the Supreme Council of Women. “Eliminating violence against women remains a top priority for the Kurdistan Regional Government…we believe security, justice and equality is the best for a good Kurdistan”, he added.
Mr. Ramanathan Balakrishnan, the UNFPA Representative for Iraq, representing the United Nations in the event, said that, “learnings from successful interventions indicate that education is a powerful way to prevent child marriage, especially keeping girls in school through secondary grades”. He also noted that violence against women and girls in public spaces is often a significant deterrent to families in sending girls to school. He commended commitments of the Kurdistan Regional Government to protect the right to education, for example, through its various efforts to ensure displaced women and girls are free from violence and to ensure access to services, including education. He pledged continued UN support in advancing the right to education for girls and violence-free Kurdistan Region.