Remarks by CDA Thomas Smitham at the Global Center for Behavioral
Health inaugural Caribbean Conference on Domestic Violence and Gender
Equality: Protecting Women and Girls, Magdalena Grand, Tobago March 26,
2013
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| CDA Thomas Smitham delivering his remarks |
(AS PREPARED)
SALUTATIONS
- Dr. Donna Baird and Dr. Tamarah Moss-Knight, of the Global Center for Behavioral Health
- Minister in the Ministry of People and Social Development, Mrs. Vernella Alleyne-Toppin
- Secretary for Health, Social Services and Gender Affairs, Tobago House of Assembly, Mrs. Claudia Groome-Duke
- Specially invited guests
- Members of the Media
- Ladies and gentlemen
Good morning and thank you for having me here today. I am honored to
join this impressive group of advocates for progress in the battle to
eliminate domestic violence and achieve gender equality. Violence
against women and girls is, sadly, a global epidemic.
Strengthening the prevention of and response to gender-based
violence, including domestic violence, is of vital importance. No
country can achieve peace and prosperity if half of its people are
deprived of reaching their full potential. Addressing this epidemic is a
priority for the United States.
Promoting the status of women and girls and striving to end domestic
violence is not just a moral imperative; it is, in essence, a strategic
one. As former Secretary Clinton so often said, women are drivers of
economic growth. Women’s education is linked to economic growth and
improved health outcomes. When women and girls are not protected, their
ability to participate fully in the development of society is stunted,
which adversely affects us all. Gender-based violence is an issue of
international human rights and national security.
According to one study, women and girls are the victims of 95 percent
of the world’s domestic violence. One-third of women in the world have
experienced sexual, physical, emotional, or other abuse in their
lifetime. One in five women will experience rape or attempted rape.
I have had the privilege of meeting many of Trinidad and Tobago’s
leaders in the fight against domestic violence. And they always say to
me, “we can’t forget the men!” And they’re right. The truth is we –
men and women – are all fully invested here. Ending domestic violence
is not a gender-specific concern.
Both men and women should be united in the fight against domestic
violence as an intolerable violation of human dignity. But, in addition
to encouraging a united front based on a moral imperative, let’s also
focus on the economic costs of domestic violence. As long as domestic
violence exists, a community cannot prosper fully. We do not only pay
emotional and psychological tolls. We also pay the medical bills and
legal costs; we lose wages and productivity. Businesses lose
employees. Families lose primary wage-earners.
Violence and abuse keep women out of the workforce and drag down
communities for generations. Focusing global efforts on fostering
women’s economic participation will grow national GDPs and personal
incomes. One study estimated that lowering barriers to women’s economic
participation in emerging economies could raise per capita incomes as
much as 14 percent. Larger incomes mean more money to feed families,
send children to school, and support local merchants and producers,
igniting a virtuous circle of economic growth.
If women are healthy and educated, their families will flourish. If
women are free from violence, their families will flourish. If women
have a chance to work and earn as full and equal partners in society,
their families will flourish.
And when families flourish, communities and nations will flourish.
The United States continues to work on improving its response to
gender-based violence, both domestically and abroad. In August of 2012,
the U.S. Government released its first-ever
Strategy to Prevent and Respond to Gender-Based Violence Globally, accompanied by an
Executive Order from President Obama, which directs all relevant U.S. agencies to implement the
Strategy. It has four main objectives:
- to increase coordination of gender-based violence prevention and
response efforts among U.S. Government agencies and with other
stakeholders;
- to enhance integration of gender-based violence prevention and response efforts into existing U.S. Government work;
- to improve collection, analysis, and use of data and research to
enhance gender-based violence prevention and response efforts; and
- to enhance or expand U.S. Government programming that addresses gender-based violence.
Since the release of the
Strategy and the
Executive Order,
the United States has engaged with regional partners to spur action
against gender-based violence, including domestic violence, within our
own hemisphere. According to the United Nations Office on Drugs and
Crime, every one of the Caribbean islands has a sexual violence rate
that is higher than the world average.
Domestic violence is not cultural, it’s criminal. And it must be
treated as a crime, with the entire legal system working together to
prevent and prosecute these crimes. It starts with having the right
laws in place. And these laws need to be implemented to hold people
accountable and address impunity, which often fuels the violence.
Last December, the
Secretary of State’s Office for Global Women’s Issues organized the first
Caribbean Dialogue on Rule of Law and Gender-Based Violence
in Miami. Approximately 80 representatives from 12 countries of the
English-speaking Caribbean joined forces to exchange ideas, best
practices, and strategies for strengthening the rule of law and
improving the response to gender-based violence. The robust turnout
included representation from a spectrum of leaders and professionals –
attorneys general, judges and magistrates, prosecutors and defense
lawyers, police officers, and civil society actors – all of whom play an
essential role in addressing this complex issue.
The
Dialogue gave
participants an opportunity to deepen their understanding of how
violence against women and girls affects all sectors of society, the
cost of violence in the work place, its linkage to HIV, and the
importance of the role of men and boys in preventing domestic violence.
During breakout sessions, participants had intensive peer-to-peer
discussions: prosecutor to prosecutor, police officer to police
officer, and lawyer to lawyer, enabling them to learn directly from each
other. Participants also had the opportunity to observe the U.S. court
system in action and visited the Miami-Dade County Domestic Violence
Court.
They had a firsthand glimpse of the U.S. judicial and legal
process for prosecuting perpetrators of domestic violence.
As part of our global strategy to end gender-based violence, we are
taking a whole-of-government approach. The U.S. Government is
initiating and supporting projects around the world as nations join
together to end this scourge. For example, the U.S. Department of
Defense provided nearly U.S. $ 3 million for a project administered by
the U.S. Department of State in the Democratic Republic of the Congo to
help create a civilian police force to respond effectively to cases of
gender-based violence. The project has trained male and female officers
on how to investigate gender-based violence cases, built police
stations, provided essential equipment enabling police to be more
responsive to the community, and funded a public awareness campaign on
gender-based violence.
In Afghanistan, the State Department’s
Bureau of International Narcotics and Law Enforcement Affairs
supports a training program for prosecutors at the Office of the
Attorney General in Kabul and seven provinces nationwide, which are
dedicated to prosecuting crimes against women and girls.
As the U.S. Government continues to provide worldwide support to
combat violence against women, we are fully aware that we still have
work to do at home.
Domestically, we’ve recognized gender-based violence as both a human
rights and public health policy concern. The U.S. Congress passed the
Violence Against Women Act in 1994 to protect victims of domestic violence and sexual assault.
The Act
provides 1.6 billion U.S. dollars toward investigation and prosecution
of violent crimes against women, imposes automatic and mandatory
restitution on those convicted, and allows civil redress in cases
prosecutors chose to leave unprosecuted. Just last month, the U.S.
Congress voted to reauthorize and expand this important law.
The Act also established the
Office on Violence Against Women
within the Department of Justice. It funds services provided to
victims of domestic violence and supports training on these issues to
ensure consistent responses across the country. One of the greatest
successes of the Act is its emphasis on a coordinated community response
to domestic violence and sexual assault. Courts, law enforcement,
prosecutors, victim services, and the private bar currently work
together in a coordinated effort that had not previously existed at the
state and local levels.
There is a repeated theme we see at home and throughout the world
when it comes to our fight against domestic violence: It’s about
cooperation and coordination.
Laws alone do not prevent domestic violence. Police officers, lawyers,
judges, and civil society must work together to protect and empower
victims.
No one should be afraid to report that they’ve been a victim of
violent crime. No one should be afraid that the police won’t listen.
No one should be afraid that they can’t afford to leave a violent home.
Communities must come together to ensure that fear does not hold
victims back. Police must be responsive, and community organizations
should have the resources to help victims find emotional and financial
security.
Domestic violence holds back entire societies. Because when women
are unequal participants, economic growth is undermined. Development is
stymied. Communities and countries are robbed of the contributions
that women could make.
The good news is that there are impassioned leaders around the world,
and in this room today, pushing for change. And I know that by working
together, by using every tool at our disposal and by refusing to ever
back down or give up, we can see real improvement in the Caribbean and
around the world.
Thank you.
Source:
http://trinidad.usembassy.gov/speeches/remarks-by-cda-thomas-smitham-march-26-2013.html