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Southern Sudanese women face multiple risks - report

Iklas Monu Ahmed and one of her four children. Her family arrived from Sudan by barge at Juba, the capital of South Sudan three months ago, and are still waiting to be resettled in a country of origin, one she left at the age of 11 Hannah McNeish/IRIN
The main threats to women in South Sudan derive from chronic deficits in health, economic opportunities, access to food and gender equality, rather than weapons, despite the prevalence of militias and armed conflict, according to the Small Arms Survey.

“In the home, the place where they should feel most secure, women face numerous threats,” states the report

“One in seven South Sudanese women will die in pregnancy or childbirth.” A married woman of childbearing age is expected to become pregnant at least once every three years until menopause, it explained. Coupled with low contraceptive use amid polygamous unions, this increases the risk of disease. 

Women are also exposed to “endemic” domestic violence. With fathers in many communities traditionally enjoying automatic custody rights, the "risk of losing their children forces many South Sudanese women to remain in abusive marriages". Widows are especially vulnerable, due to a lack of public safety nets. “Do they want to hear about our suffering? What will they do with it?" asked a Member of Parliament interviewee. "If somebody like me who is an MP and a widow cannot get any support, what about those women in the villages who have nobody to speak for them?"

Hunger is also a problem, with high food prices piling pressure on already struggling families, adds the report.

aw/am/mw


This article was produced by IRIN News while it was part of the United Nations Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs. Please send queries on copyright or liability to the UN. For more information: https://shop.un.org/rights-permissions

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