
Addressing The Intergenerational Effects Of Conflict-Related Sexual Violence
Conflict-related sexual violence (CRSV) is a crime which affects all aspects of victims/survivors' lives, with consequences which are far reaching and long-lasting. CRSV may cause physical and psychological trauma, and stigma, among others, all which affect victims/survivors and their families for generations. Many survivors remain silent due to fear of reprisals, lack of support, and the stigma placed on them instead of the perpetrators. CRSV is a crime which destroys the social fabric of entire communities for generations to come. The consequences can be magnified where CRSV results in pregnancies, often leading to further societal rejection of children born in these circumstances.
Despite various international initiatives and efforts, the crime continues unabated, and is perpetrated across all situations of conflict and atrocity crimes. While some situations receive some attention, with media coverage, documentation efforts, investigations and prosecutions, others continue in the darkness. For example, in a recent statement in June 2025, the UN Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Sexual Violence in Conflict Ms. Pramila Patten expressed grave concerns over the escalating levels of sexual violence being inflicted upon women and girls amid the worsening gang violence in Haiti. As she emphasized, the situation has reached a breaking point: 'These heinous crimes are overwhelmingly concentrated in areas under gang control, where State presence is virtually nonexistent. In many instances, sexual violence is being used deliberately and systematically to assert dominance and punish communities.' The situation in Haiti is among several dire cases that fall through the crack of international attention and responses.
Ten years ago, on June 19, 2015, the United Nations General Assembly proclaimed June 19 the International Day for the Elimination of Sexual Violence in Conflict, to raise awareness of the need to put an end to CRSV, and to honor the victims/survivors of sexual violence around the world. In 2025, the International Day for the Elimination of Sexual Violence in Conflict is focused on addressing the intergenerational effects of CRSV, including by empowering victims/survivors through healing and community support. As the UN stressed, 'To break this cycle and promote healing, access to mental health and psychosocial support is crucial. Survivors require trauma-informed care to help navigate their experiences and build resilience. Effective intervention strategies include community-based support, child-friendly resources for young survivors, educational initiatives, and legislative changes aimed at preventing conflict-related sexual violence. By addressing intergenerational trauma, we can foster an environment where survivors and their children are empowered to reclaim their lives, transforming their experiences of horror into hope and healing.'
For the 2025 commemoration of the UN Day, UN Secretary-General António Guterres emphasized that 'The focus of this year is the deep and lasting intergenerational wounds of conflict-related sexual violence. To break the cycle, we must confront the horrors of the past, support the survivors of today, and protect future generations from the same fate. That means ensuring safe access to vital, survivor-centered and trauma-informed services; delivering justice and holding perpetrators to account; and listening to -- and amplifying -- the vital voices of survivors.'
António Guterres further added that 'Too often, perpetrators walk free, cloaked in impunity, while survivors often bear the impossible burden of stigma and trauma. The pain does not end with them. It stretches across lifetimes, ravaging generations of families, and forces the inherited legacy of trauma and suffering on the descendants of survivors.'
Indeed, CRSV, including rape, sexual slavery, forced prostitution, forced pregnancy, forced abortion, enforced sterilization, forced marriage and any other form of sexual violence of comparable gravity perpetrated against women, men, girls or boys, is a war crime, a crime against humanity and a constituent act of genocide under international law, and must be treated as such. Words of condemnation are important but never enough. Actions are key - including investigations and prosecutions of all those responsible for the crimes, but also steps to support victims/survivors with their short and long term needs.
Hashtags

Try Our AI Features
Explore what Daily8 AI can do for you:
Comments
No comments yet...
Related Articles


CBS News
5 hours ago
- CBS News
Immigration activists hold emergency town hall as DHS prepares to end TPS for Haitians living in U.S.
A group of activists in North Miami gathered to discuss resources and strategies for South Florida's Haitian community, just days after the Department of Homeland Security announced that Temporary Protection Status (TPS) would end for the hundreds of thousands of Haitians in the United States. Members of the community are on edge after the decision was made. Passionate testimony of Haitian leaders in South Florida echoed through The Katz restaurant and bar in North Miami on Sunday evening. The meeting discussed the Trump administration's decision to terminate TPS for about 500,000 Haitians in the U.S., effective in September. "I don't think 10 weeks is necessarily a sufficient amount of time for someone to disconnect themselves if they've been in this country for 15 years," said Sandra Cherfrere, an immigration attorney and advocate. South Florida Haitians expressed how they felt when they heard the news. "I was in tears because I felt so betrayed that they were telling the American people that Haiti is 'okay' when as an American citizen who is of Haitian descent, I know that is not safe," said Naomi Esther Blemur, executive director, balancing life and advocate. "That right now in Port-au-Prince, there are no flights, and it's been months since there have been no flights in Port-au-Prince." According to the United Nations Human Rights Office, about 2,700 Haitians have been murdered within the first six months of 2025. About 300,000 Haitians live in the Miami area. "Take your child from all the comforts in America and go back and live in Haiti with me, where we may or may not have a place that has inside plumbing, for example," Cherfrere said. Sunday's public meeting was to give legal advice and options to Haitians living in the Miami area, but many advocates fear those on TPS may have less time than they think. "The administration may not wait until Sept. 2 to start picking up people whose TPS is going to expire because, as of right now, I know for a fact that there are individuals [who] have provided TPS applications who are in detention, right? So, I know those families are probably scrambling, trying to get things together," Cherfrere said. "I know people who are already trying to make arrangements to go to Canada or somewhere else." The Trump administration has also ended protections for immigrants from countries such as Cuba, Venezuela and Nicaragua.
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
People on sinking Tuvalu seek Australia's climate visas
More than one-third of the people in the tiny Pacific nation of Tuvalu, which scientists predict will be submerged by rising seas, have applied for a landmark climate visa to migrate to Australia. Tuvalu's ambassador to the United Nations, Tapugao Falefou, told Reuters on Sunday he was "startled by the huge number of people vying for this opportunity", and the small community was interested to learn who the first lot of climate migrants would be. Tuvalu, one of the countries at greatest risk from climate change, which experts say is boosting sea levels, has a population of 11,000 on its nine atolls scattered across the Pacific between Australia and Hawaii. Since applications for Australia's visa lottery opened this month, 1124 people have registered, with family members bringing the total seeking the visa to 4052 under the bilateral climate and security treaty. Applications close on July 18, with an annual cap of 280 visas designed to ensure migration to Australia does not cause brain drain from Tuvalu, officials said when the treaty was announced in 2023. The visa will allow Tuvalu residents to live, work and study in Australia, accessing health benefits and education on the same basis as Australian citizens. "Moving to Australia under the Falepili Union treaty will in some way provide additional remittance to families staying back," Falefou said. By 2050, NASA scientists project daily tides will submerge half the main atoll of Funafuti, home to 60 per cent of Tuvalu's residents, where villagers cling to a strip of land as narrow as 20 metres. That forecast assumes a one-metre rise in sea levels, while the worst case, double that, would put 90 per cent of Funafuti under water. Tuvalu, whose mean elevation is just two metres, has experienced a sea-level rise of 15cm over the past three decades, one-and-a-half times the global average. It has built seven hectares of artificial land, and is planning more, which it hopes will stay above the tides until 2100.
Yahoo
5 hours ago
- Yahoo
Judges to rule on Palestinian group's legal action over Israel military exports
A Palestinian human rights group will discover on Monday whether it has won a legal challenge against the Government over decisions related to exports of military equipment to Israel amid the conflict in Gaza. Al-Haq is taking legal action against the Department for Business and Trade (DBT) over its decision to continue licensing exports of components for F-35 fighter jets. In September last year, the Government suspended export licences for weapons and military equipment following a review of Israel's compliance with international humanitarian law in the conflict. But an exemption was made for some licences related to parts for F-35s, with lawyers for Al-Haq telling the High Court in May that this 'carve-out' was unlawful and 'gives rise to a significant risk of facilitating crime'. The DBT is defending the challenge, with its barristers telling a four-day hearing in London that the carve-out is 'consistent with the rules of international law' and that suspending the licences would negatively impact a wider international programme. Lord Justice Males and Mrs Justice Steyn are due to hand down their ruling at 10.30am on Monday. At the hearing at the Royal Courts of Justice, Raza Husain KC, for Al-Haq, said the case came 'against the backdrop of human calamity' in Gaza, describing the conflict as a 'live-streamed genocide'. In written submissions, he said that the Government misunderstood relevant parts of the Geneva Conventions when there was a clear risk that the parts might be used to commit or facilitate violations of international humanitarian law by Israel. F-35s are part of an international defence programme which produces and maintains the fighter jets, with the UK contributing components for both assembly lines and an international pool. An earlier hearing in the case was told that the decision to 'carve out' licences related to F-35 components followed advice from Defence Secretary John Healey, who said a suspension would impact the 'whole F-35 programme' and have a 'profound impact on international peace and security'. In written submissions for the May hearing, Sir James Eadie KC, for the Government, said that this 'provided justification to take exceptional measures to avoid these impacts and was consistent with the UK's domestic and international legal obligations'. He continued that some of Al-Haq's criticisms 'are not based on a balanced appreciation of the facts' and did not consider 'the true depth and range of the information-gathering and analysis' by the Government when it made the decision. Charities Oxfam and Amnesty International, as well as Human Rights Watch, all intervened in the case.