Nearly one-third of women worldwide faced partner or sexual violence: WHO

Despite stark findings, World Health Organization says violence against women and girls is ‘a deeply neglected crisis’.

BUCHAREST, ROMANIA - JUNE 18: A protester holds a sign during a rally for women's rights outside the government headquarters on June 18, 2025 in Bucharest, Romania. A woman was killed by her partner in a rural area just two weeks after another homicide against a woman took place in Bucharest. Romania records the second highest number of physical attacks against women per annum in the EU. Statistics show that between 2015 and 2023, 426 women in Romania were killed by partners, ex-partners, or family members. In 2024 alone, over 130,000 police interventions in domestic violence cases were recorded, with more than 12,000 provisional protection orders issued. The economic cost of gender-based violence in Romania is estimated at around 16 billion Euros a year. (Photo by Andrei Pungovschi/Getty Images)
A protester holds a sign during a rally for women's rights in Bucharest, Romania, after a woman was killed by her partner [File: Andrei Pungovschi/Getty Images]

Nearly one in three women – totalling about 840 million around the world – have experienced intimate partner or sexual violence in their lifetimes, the World Health Organization (WHO) said in a new report.

Released on Wednesday, it also found 316 million women and girls aged 15 and older were subjected to physical or sexual violence by an intimate partner over the past year.

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That amounts to about 11 percent of all women and girls in that age bracket globally.

“Violence against women is one of humanity’s oldest and most pervasive injustices yet still one of the least acted upon,” WHO Director-General Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus said in a statement accompanying the findings.

“No society can call itself fair, safe or healthy while half its population lives in fear. Ending this violence is not only a matter of policy; it is a matter of dignity, equality and human rights. Behind every statistic is a woman or girl whose life has been forever altered.”

Released in advance of the UN’s International Day for the Elimination of Violence Against Women and Girls later this month, the WHO report analysed data from 168 countries collected between 2000 and 2023.

Despite the stark findings, the UN agency warned violence against women remains “a deeply neglected crisis” with efforts to address the problem “critically underfunded”.

It said only 0.2 percent of global aid was allocated to programmes focused on preventing violence against women in 2022.

That funding fell even further this year, the report said, as United States President Donald Trump slashed his country’s foreign aid and development contributions.

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The WHO also warned that women and girls in conflict zones or living in other vulnerable situations are particularly at risk of experiencing intimate partner and sexual violence.

“In recent years, the rising number of armed conflicts, protracted crises and environmental degradation and disasters have underscored the increasing risk of violence against women living in these fragile contexts,” the report said.

“The risk of exposure to this violence is heightened by the resulting displacement and insecurity.”


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