States should
condemn violence against
women and should not invoke any
custom,
tradition or
religious consideration to
avoid their
obligations with
respect to its
elimination.
States should pursue by all appropriate means and without
delay a
policy of
eliminating violence against
women and, to this end, should:
(a) Consider, where they have not yet done so,
ratifying or
acceding to the
Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women or
withdrawing reservations to that
Convention;
(b)
Refrain from engaging in
violence against
women;
(d) Develop
penal,
civil, labor and
administrative sanctions in
domestic legislation to
punish and
redress the wrongs caused to
women who are subjected to
violence;
women who are subjected to
violence should be provided with
access to the
mechanisms of
justice and, as provided for by
national legislation, to just and effective
remedies for the
harm that they have
suffered;
States should also inform
women of their
rights in
seeking redress through such
mechanisms;
(e) Consider the possibility of developing
national plans of
action to
promote the
protection of
women against any form of
violence, or to
include provisions for that
purpose in
plans already
existing, taking into
account, as appropriate, such
cooperation as can be provided by
non-governmental organizations, particularly those
concerned with the issue of
violence against
women;
(f) Develop, in a comprehensive way,
preventive approaches and all those
measures of a
legal,
political,
administrative and
cultural nature that
promote the
protection of
women against any form of
violence, and ensure that the re-
victimization of
women does not occur because of
laws insensitive to
gender considerations,
enforcement practices or other
interventions;
(g)
Work to ensure, to the
maximum extent feasible in the
light of their available
resources and, where needed, within the
framework of
international cooperation, that
women subjected to
violence and, where appropriate, their
children have specialized
assistance, such as
rehabilitation,
assistance in
child care and
maintenance,
treatment, counseling, and
health and
social services,
facilities and programmers, as well as
support structures, and should take all other appropriate
measures to
promote their
safety and
physical and
psychological rehabilitation;
(j)
Adopt all appropriate
measures, especially in the
field of
education, to modify the
social and
cultural patterns of
conduct of
men and women and to
eliminate prejudices, customary practices and all other practices based on the
idea of the inferiority or superiority of either of the
sexes and on
stereotyped roles for
men and women;
(k)
Promote research, collect
data and compile
statistics, especially
concerning domestic violence, relating to the prevalence of different forms of
violence against
women and
encourage research on the causes,
nature, seriousness and
consequences of
violence against
women and on the
effectiveness of
measures implemented to
prevent and
redress violence against
women; those
statistics and findings of the
research will be made
public;
(l)
Adopt measures directed towards the
elimination of
violence against
women who are especially
vulnerable to
violence;
(n)
Encourage the
development of appropriate
guidelines to assist in the
implementation of the
principles set forth in the present
Declaration;