Presidential Summit tackles the scourge of Gender-based Violence and Femicide

Department of Social Development 2022/11/06 - 22:00



​On Tuesday, 01 November 2022, President Cyril Ramaphosa challenged delegates attending the second Presidential Summit on Gender-Based Violence and Femicide (GBVF) to be focused on action and results towards ending violence against women and children.

Ramaphosa was addressing delegates at Gallagher Convention Centre in Midrand and stated that as a society, ending violence against women and children cannot be anything but the highest priority.

The second summit was aimed at reflecting on the work undertaken since the first Presidential Summit on GBVF in November 2018, and to report on key successes, and challenges, and outline clear strategies to overcome the challenges.

Delivering his keynote address, the President noted that during the first summit, the participants collectively made a firm commitment to the nation to undertake a comprehensive, effective, and united response to GBVF.

“We agreed to develop a National Strategic Plan (NSP) to guide our national response, to coordinate the various sectors involved in the fight against GBVF, to strengthen the state’s response, and to align the efforts of government, the private sector and civil society.”

“These included a number of interventions to deal with the scourge of GBVF in the country, which started with the development of a GBVF Emergency Response Action Plan in 2019.”
“I requested Parliament’s Presiding Officers to call a special joint sitting of both houses of Parliament to announce the action plan. The plan was embraced by members of Parliament representing all political parties.”

“This is an accountability summit. This second Presidential Summit is for us to assess progress in fulfilling the commitments we made at the first Summit in 2018 and in implementing the National Strategic Plan (NSP on GBVF).”

“What we have stressed throughout this process is the importance of a collaborative and coordinated approach towards combating gender-based violence and femicide. We need to plan together, implement together and account together.”

“The actions we take now will determine whether this crime forever remains a feature of our national life, or whether we can say we are the generation that ended it,” President Ramaphosa said.

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