logo
Online pornography telling teenage boys inflicting violence and degrading sex acts on girls 'is normal'

Online pornography telling teenage boys inflicting violence and degrading sex acts on girls 'is normal'

Irish Examiner28-04-2025
The normalisation and widespread availability of online pornography is 'cementing and solidifying' gender stereotypes and violence against women and girls, a UN expert has said.
Reem Alsalem, the UN special rapporteur on violence against women and girls, told a webinar in Dublin that adolescent boys were being told by pornography that inflicting violence on girls, and degrading them, is 'normal and part of sexual relations'.
She said countries should not tolerate a situation where they have laws against gender violence in the offline world, but a 'jungle free-for-all' online.
Ms Alsalem also condemned the 'unfolding genocide' against Palestinians which, she said, involved the 'large-scale killing of Palestinian women' in Gaza.
She said there were specific international protections for women under the Geneva Convention and other humanitarian laws and said Palestinian women in Gaza were being targeted to limit their 'reproductive capacity' to bear children that are Palestinian.
The UN independent consultant said the level at which this was being done was 'unprecedented' in any conflict and was being used as a 'genocidal tool'.
Speaking more generally, she told a webinar organised by the Institute of International and European Affairs, she felt the world had entered a worrying period for women and girls.
'I think we are actually in a phase where we seem to be cementing and solidifying gender stereotypes rather than undermining them or fighting them,' she said.
'Some of the most pernicious, sexist stereotypes that fuel violence against women and girls are those that objectify females, that sexualise them, that commodify females, eroticise violence, due to things like normalisation and immense dissemination of pornography and consumption of pornography and attempts to normalise the purchase of sexual acts and buying of women.'
Ms Alsalem said a report she published last year put forward the proposition that 'pornography is actually online prostitution' and could be described as 'crime scenes'.
She said there was 'no effective' age verification online in terms of what children could access.
'Adolescent boys, even younger boys, access pornography at liberty," she said.
It creates views in their head that inflicting violence on girls, sexualising them, subjecting them to degrading and violent and humiliating acts — some of them life-threatening, like strangulation — is normal and part of sexual relations.
'And girls, on the other side, are feeling this tremendously, they are feeling hyper-sexualised, [that] this is a normal part of what society expects of them, to attend to male sexual needs.'
She said a comprehensive approach was needed to combat the problem beyond regulation and criminalisation: '[We need a] lot more education, how to talk about gender equality, disseminate sex education [that] focuses more on equal dignified relationship between men and boys and women and girls.
"I don't like the word 'toxic masculinity', [but] how to be male in a society that doesn't glorify violence and misogyny.'
On trans' rights, she said everyone should be free and have the right to assume a gender identity that is different than what it was at birth.
But she argued for the protection of women-only safe spaces, whether in sports, in changing rooms or quotas for political representation.
She said while there were 'tensions in human rights', it was 'very clear' protections for women and girls against discrimination was 'based on sex' and that was understood to be biological sex.
Read More
GP: Women disclosing serious physical injuries due to sexual acts by partners
Orange background

Try Our AI Features

Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:

Comments

No comments yet...

Related Articles

Israel due to begin another 10-hour military 'pause' in Gaza as UN pushes for two-state talks
Israel due to begin another 10-hour military 'pause' in Gaza as UN pushes for two-state talks

The Journal

timean hour ago

  • The Journal

Israel due to begin another 10-hour military 'pause' in Gaza as UN pushes for two-state talks

LAST UPDATE | 1 hr ago THE ISRAELI MILITARY will begin a second day of its daily 'tactical pause' in three areas of Gaza, in what it claims is an effort to ease the worsening humanitarian crisis. In a statement on Sunday, the Israel Defense Forces (IDF) said it had launched a 'tactical suspension of military operations for humanitarian purposes' in al-Mawasi, Deir el-Balah and Gaza City. The pause is scheduled to run from 10am (8am Irish time) to 8pm local time daily, until further notice. Despite the move, safety on the ground is far from guaranteed for Palestinians. An airstrike was reported in Gaza City yesterday in an area where Israel had announced a pause just an hour earlier. The IDF said it was unaware of the strike. The UN's aid chief, Tom Fletcher, noted some easing of movement restrictions since Israel agreed to expand humanitarian access for a week. However, he urged that the effort now needed to be 'sustained, vast and fast', pressing Israel to accelerate the approval of lorries at border crossings. Jordan and the United Arab Emirates carried out their first airdrops into Gaza in months yesterday, though officials stressed that air delivery is no substitute for consistent land access. Humanitarian aid was airdropped to Palestinians over northern Gaza. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Israel's Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu again criticised the UN, accusing it of having 'no excuses left' for not delivering aid. He also rejected allegations that Israel is deliberately starving civilians, a potential war crime, calling such claims an 'egregious falsehood'. The UN said it would attempt to reach as many people as possible now that secure land routes have been announced. The World Food Programme (WFP) reported it has enough supplies in, or en route to, the region to feed Gaza's 2.1 million residents for almost three months. Advertisement The WFP says 62,000 tonnes of food per month are needed to meet the population's basic needs. Trucks carrying humanitarian aids line up to enter the Rafah crossing between Egypt and Gaza. Alamy Stock Photo Alamy Stock Photo Israel said that 120 trucks of aid have been distributed in Gaza so far. UN Conference on Two-State Solution France and Saudi Arabia are leading a UN-backed initiative in New York this week aimed at reviving the push for a two-state solution for Israel and Palestine. French President Emmanuel Macron's announcement last week that France will recognise the State of Palestine in September has added momentum to the three-day conference. Several other European nations are expected to follow suit. France's decision to recognise Palestine 'will breathe new life into a conference that seemed destined to irrelevance,' said Richard Gowan, an analyst at the International Crisis Group. 'Macron's announcement changes the game. Other participants will be scrabbling to decide if they should also declare an intent to recognize Palestine,' Gowan said. Palestinian Prime Minister Mohammad Mustafa and officials from over 100 countries are expected to attend the New York conference. The conference will also focus on reforming the Palestinian Authority, disarming Hamas, and encouraging further Arab-Israeli normalisation. While no new peace deals are expected, French officials say Arab states will, for the first time, issue a joint condemnation of Hamas and call for its disarmament. Neither Israel nor the United States are participating in the talks. Despite 'tactical pauses' announced by Israel, the humanitarian catastrophe in Gaza is expected to dominate speeches by representatives. Gowan said he expected 'very fierce criticism of Israel.' Additional reporting from AFP Readers like you are keeping these stories free for everyone... A mix of advertising and supporting contributions helps keep paywalls away from valuable information like this article. Over 5,000 readers like you have already stepped up and support us with a monthly payment or a once-off donation. Learn More Support The Journal

Aid reaching Gaza a 'drop in the ocean' of what is needed, says UN
Aid reaching Gaza a 'drop in the ocean' of what is needed, says UN

RTÉ News​

time3 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Aid reaching Gaza a 'drop in the ocean' of what is needed, says UN

Aid that is being air dropped into Gaza is a step in the right direction, but the level of aid getting into the territory in recent months is "a drop in the ocean" of what is needed, a senior UN figure has said. Peace talks in the Middle East came to a standstill last week after the US and Israel recalled negotiating teams from Qatar, with White House special envoy Steve Witkoff blaming Hamas for a "lack of desire" to reach an agreement. Since then, Israel has promised military pauses in three populated areas of Gaza to allow designated UN convoys of aid to reach desperate Palestinians. The UK, which is joining efforts to airdrop aid into the enclave and evacuate children in need of medical assistance, said that access to supplies must be "urgently" widened. Speaking on RTÉ's Morning Ireland, UN Under Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Co-Ordinator Tom Fletcher said the situation in Gaza is "unrelentingly grim at the moment for civilians". "Gaza is starving. One in every three people has not eaten for days and days in a row," he said. "So the needs are enormous, and we're ready to go. You know, the aid that's got in in recent months is a drop in the ocean of what's needed." Mr Fletcher said they were "ready to mobilise" and hoped that the routes were secured so food, water, medicine and shelter could be brought to desperate civilians. In relation to how much aid will be allowed in, he said it is not clear. During the last ceasefire, over 42 days, 600 to 700 trucks a day were getting into Gaza. "That's what we need right now", he said. "That's what the civilians in Gaza need. Yesterday, I think we got some somewhere around over 100 trucks in, nothing like enough." He said that all the border crossings need to be opened and all restrictions on visas and other "bureaucratic restraints" and "security restrictions" should be removed. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer is expected to raise the prospect of reviving ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas when he meets US President Donald Trump in Scotland. The prime minister will travel to Ayrshire, where the US president is staying at his Turnberry golf resort, for wide-ranging discussions on trade and the Middle East as international concern grows over starvation in Gaza. 'Unrelentingly focused' Mr Fletcher said that the agency is facing a tough time but remains "unrelentingly focused". "I'm talking to the teams on the ground last night, this morning. They themselves are hungry. They themselves have been going without food. Incredibly brave people and they're driving these trucks facing enormous crowds of desperate, starving Palestinians." Mr Fletcher said the situation was a "starvation crisis" and a "medical crisis". He added that decisions were made daily as to what trucks to try to get into the territory. Gaza needed to be flooded with aid, he said. "We can do that. We've got the aid. We could reach everyone in Gaza with food, with medical support, with shelter. But we've got to get going at much, much bigger scale." Reacting to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu saying that his government was being unfairly blamed and that there are secure routes, Mr Fletcher said, "well, if those secure routes have existed, they've been very, very hard to find". "For months, there's been a blockade, little bits has gone in now and again, but the situation on the ground is dire, and I think that's why world leaders, across the planet, have been so clear, so firm that we have to be allowed to do our job."

Aid reaching Gaza is a 'drop in the ocean' of what is needed, says UN
Aid reaching Gaza is a 'drop in the ocean' of what is needed, says UN

RTÉ News​

time3 hours ago

  • RTÉ News​

Aid reaching Gaza is a 'drop in the ocean' of what is needed, says UN

UN Under Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and Emergency Relief Co-Ordinator Tom Fletcher has said that aid being air dropped into Gaza is a step in the right direction, but that the aid getting into the territory in recent months is "a drop in the ocean" of what is needed. Peace talks in the Middle East came to a standstill last week after the US and Israel recalled negotiating teams from Qatar, with White House special envoy Steve Witkoff blaming Hamas for a "lack of desire" to reach an agreement. Since then, Israel has promised military pauses in three populated areas of Gaza to allow designated UN convoys of aid to reach desperate Palestinians. The UK, which is joining efforts to airdrop aid into the enclave and evacuate children in need of medical assistance, said that access to supplies must be "urgently" widened. Speaking on RTÉ's Morning Ireland, Mr Fletcher said the situation in Gaza is "unrelentingly grim at the moment for civilians". "Gaza is starving. One in every three people has not eaten for days and days in a row. "So the needs are enormous, and we're ready to go. You know, the aid that's got in in recent months is a drop in the ocean of what's needed." Mr Fletcher said they were "ready to mobilise" and hoped that the routes were secured so food, water, medicine and shelter could be brought to desperate civilians. In relation to how much aid will be allowed in, he said it is not clear. During the last ceasefire, over 42 days, 600 to 700 trucks a day were getting into Gaza. "That's what we need right now", he said. "That's what the civilians in Gaza need. Yesterday, I think we got some somewhere around over 100 trucks in, nothing like enough." He said that all the border crossings need to be opened and all restrictions on visas and other "bureaucratic restraints" and "security restrictions" should be removed. British Prime Minister Keir Starmer is expected to raise the prospect of reviving ceasefire talks between Israel and Hamas when he meets US President Donald Trump in Scotland. The prime minister will travel to Ayrshire, where the US president is staying at his Turnberry golf resort, for wide-ranging discussions on trade and the Middle East as international concern grows over starvation in Gaza. 'Unrelentingly focused' Mr Fletcher said that the agency is facing a tough time but remains "unrelentingly focused". "I'm talking to the teams on the ground last night, this morning. They themselves are hungry. They themselves have been going without food. Incredibly brave people and they're driving these trucks facing enormous crowds of desperate, starving Palestinians." Mr Fletcher said the situation was a "starvation crisis" and a "medical crisis". He added that decisions were made daily as to what trucks to try to get into the territory. Gaza needed to be flooded with aid, he said. "We can do that. We've got the aid. We could reach everyone in Gaza with food, with medical support, with shelter. But we've got to get going at much, much bigger scale." Reacting to Israeli Prime Minister Benjamin Netanyahu saying that his government was being unfairly blamed and that there are secure routes, Mr Fletcher said, "well, if those secure routes have existed, they've been very, very hard to find. "For months, there's been a blockade, little bits has gone in now and again, but the situation on the ground is dire, and I think that's why world leaders, across the planet, have been so clear, so firm that we have to be allowed to do our job."

DOWNLOAD THE APP

Get Started Now: Download the App

Ready to dive into a world of global content with local flavor? Download Daily8 app today from your preferred app store and start exploring.
app-storeplay-store