New ChildFund report reveals shocking levels of violence against women and children in Papua New Guinea

Welcome Back!

You have Gifts for Good in your basket.

Welcome Back!

Last time you were here, you were looking to help vulnerable children and families. Your support can save and change lives.

Sydney, Australia, August 13, 2013: ChildFund Australia today launched a report into family and sexual violence in Papua New Guinea (PNG), revealing extreme levels of violence against women and children, and the need for programs that work with men to change prevailing social norms that allow such brutal and widespread violence to occur.

The report, Stop Violence Against Women and Children in Papua New Guinea, draws on existing research as well as ChildFund’s own field research conducted in Rigo District, Central Province and features candid interviews with women and children who have suffered severe physical assault and sexual abuse. The report also includes interviews with men who are showing leadership in their community and standing with women in the fight for change.

While there is no official data on violence against women and children in PNG, studies indicate that violence occurs in more than two-thirds of families. Many researchers believe this is just the tip of the iceberg, a view supported by ChildFund’s research. Most women interviewed in Rigo District had experienced violence and said their children were often present when their partners were violent towards them.

Monica Richards, who manages Haus Ruth, Port Moresby’s main women’s shelter, says about 60 per cent of children who come to the refuge with their abused mothers have also been hurt. “Most [men], when they touch the women, they touch the children as well,” she says.

Alarmingly, children younger than 16 represent half the people who seek medical help after being raped. One in four is younger than 12 and one in 10 is under eight[1].

Among the key findings of ChildFund’s research:

  • In PNG women are raped, killed and maimed on a shocking scale. The brutality is severe, often involving bush knives, axes, burning, spearing and even biting.
  • PNG does not have enough national programs that work with men in order to change prevailing social norms that allow widespread and obvious violence.
  • With limited social services available in PNG, women often feel compelled to stay with violent men as they are the breadwinners.
  • Women need medical certificates to prosecute violent partners in court but cannot always afford or access them.
  • Education makes a difference – information, even a simple pamphlet, can make someone realise violence against women and children is wrong and there is a law to protect them.
  • Expensive and inadequate transport makes it extremely difficult for women in rural areas to access medical attention in Port Moresby. District hospitals and subdistrict health clinics are not able to provide survivors of rape with medical treatment, emergency contraception or post-exposure prophylaxis to prevent HIV. They also lack safe, confidential spaces where women can be supported.
  • Women said police were often not interested in responding to violence against them and sometimes police were perpetrators of the violence.

What ChildFund is doing

ChildFund has used the findings of its research to develop a new program that will provide better support and medical care for women and children who have been assaulted, and prevent violence over the long term. This community-based program includes:

PREVENTION: Working with men to understand, challenge and change violent attitudes and behaviours. Engaging schools to teach children conflict resolution skills, open communication techniques and the importance of respecting girls and women.

EDUCATION: Increasing awareness of the medical, counselling, legal and security services available to women and children. Communicating these messages via different media (paper, radio, text message and community engagement) and by influential agents (village leaders, churches, schools).

PROTECTION: Providing a mobile health clinic to cover 19 remote rural villages that do not currently have access to medical and support services. The clinic will be staffed with two specialist nurses to provide potentially life-saving medical assistance and two trained counsellors to provide support, referrals and information on survivor rights (including reporting incidents of violence and equipping them with medical certificates, if required). Services at a rural district hospital will also be improved, giving survivors of violence greater access to the specialised care they need.

Nigel Spence, CEO of ChildFund Australia, says: “This research reminds us that violence against women inevitably hurts children too. For many women, it is their children who are the driving force behind their determination to escape, as their children’s lives are also in danger.

“ChildFund is rolling out a new program in Papua New Guinea, which not only provides services to protect women and children, but will also work with men to change attitudes so that violence is seen as unacceptable. Our report shows that the attitudes and behaviours of some men have already positively shifted, so it is important that we partner with communities and strengthen local services to really bring about significant, long-term change.”

Stop violence against women and children in Papua New Guinea:

Donate to ChildFund Australia’s appeal: www.childfund.org.au/appeal/png or call 1800 023 600

Download the report here.

Share our videos here and here.

Sign our petition here.

Join in the conversation online by using the hashtag: #stopviolencePNG

[1] Dame Carol Kidu, Transcript: Sex, Women and 21st Century in Papua New Guinea, 2012. Speech given at Australian National University to celebrate International Women’s Day. Dame Carol Kidu http://www.pameladenoonlecture.net/the_pamela_denoon_lecture/pamela-denoon-lecture-2012.html

About Stop Violence Against Women and Children in Papua New Guinea Report

This report draws on qualitative field research and a literature review conducted by independent consultant Sarah Martin, commissioned by ChildFund Papua New Guinea. ChildFund PNG staff contributed significantly to this project. Special thanks to Manish Joshi, country director; Fiona Fandim, senior program officer; Margaret Gebai, supporter relations officer; and Namuel Nungwehim, procurement officer. The report also features interviews conducted in Papua New Guinea by Diana Mason, communications and marketing director, ChildFund Australia; Vlad Sokhin, documentary photographer; and Heather Wiseman, National Press Club of Australia’s Health Journalist of the Year, 2012. ChildFund Australia would also like to thank and recognise the important work being done by Haus Ruth, Family Support Centre, Family and Sexual Violence Action Committee and Papua Hahine.

ChildFund Australia CEO Nigel Spence has today criticised the Government’s plans to delay promised aid increases by another year and spend further overseas aid domestically on asylum seeker costs.

The Gillard Government has announced a 9.6 per cent aid increase on 2012-13, bringing the aid budget to 0.37 per cent of gross national income (GNI). However, the promised aid target of 0.5 per cent of GNI has been deferred for a second time to 2017-18.

Foreign Minister Bob Carr has also confirmed the government will spend another $375 million of the overseas aid budget on asylum seeker costs in Australia. This comes just five months after the last diversion of aid funds for domestic purposes.

ChildFund Australia CEO Nigel Spence says: “Even in relatively slow economic times, Australia is a wealthy nation and can afford to maintain its commitments to the world’s poor. There are other ways for the Government to balance its books than retracting funds that were intended for the world’s poorest people.”

Australian Council for International Development executive director Marc Purcell says the December cuts have already forced the closure of health, education and women’s rights programs.

“In the space of six short months the Government has managed to divert $750 million in total to domestic costs. It simply isn’t overseas aid,” Mr Purcell said. “$750 million could immunise 250 million children against life-threatening diseases in developing countries. It could buy 300 million birthing kits for mothers with no skilled birth attendant and no clean hospital to go to.

“These are sobering figures when you know that in the developing world over 800 women and girls die every single day in childbirth. That’s one every two minutes.”

Slowing the overseas aid budget will be a severe setback for many of the world’s most vulnerable children. Since 1990 global poverty has been halved, the number of children dying each year has dropped from 12 million to less than 7 million, and primary school enrolments are up. Adequate and predictable financing is essential to maintain this momentum.

“We welcome the Government restating its commitment to aid, but the decision to defer promised aid increases and divert funding from overseas aid to domestic spending is at odds with this,‰Û Mr Spence said. ‰ÛÏWe are extremely disappointed with this budget announcement.”

PHOTO: Children in Nonghet, Laos have a much better chance of staying healthy and completing their primary education with new schools, safe water supplies and toilets in their villages. These projects were undertaken with the support of ChildFund Australia and the Australian government‰Ûªs aid program. [Photo by Cindy Bryson/ChildFund Australia]