During the reporting period, the UN Trust Fund has supported multiple projects focused on sexual violence in conflict including initiatives which have provided essential services to women and girls in conflict situations, supported refugee and IDP women and girls, and initiatives in post-conflict settings which have sought to address the social stigma and discrimination experienced by survivors sexual violence.
For example, in Kosovo, Medica Gjakova and Medica Kosova are helping women survivors of conflict-related sexual violence inflicted during the 1998-1999 war. Through comprehensive services, including psychosocial counselling, gynaecological care, legal aid, and economic empowerment, the two organizations have helped survivors heal, reclaim their rights and rebuild their lives. Between 2022 and 2024, Medica Kosova assisted over 300 women in applying for "survivor status", which gives them access to pensions, healthcare and other reparations. The organization also addresses the rise in intimate partner violence, which in 2024 led to over 2,900 documented cases and three femicides.
In 2024, 43% of the UN Trust Fund's 27th grant-making cycle funding ($5.7 million) supported initiatives for crisis-affected women and girls, including a dedicated special window that channelled $4.6 million to eight organizations, with at least two-thirds of the special window projects addressing conflict-related sexual violence.
Previously, 18 initiatives supported through a funding window focused on forcibly displaced women and girls and refugees (2016-2022) reached over 35,000 refugee and/or forcibly displaced women and girls, with many also addressing sexual violence, notably in refugee camps among women fleeing conflict.
During the reporting period, the UN Trust Fund has supported multiple projects focused on sexual violence in conflict including initiatives which have provided essential services to women and girls in conflict situations, supported refugee and IDP women and girls, and initiatives in post-conflict settings which have sought to address the social stigma and discrimination experienced by survivors sexual violence.
For example, in Kosovo, Medica Gjakova and Medica Kosova are helping women survivors of conflict-related sexual violence inflicted during the 1998-1999 war. Through comprehensive services, including psychosocial counselling, gynaecological care, legal aid, and economic empowerment, the two organizations have helped survivors heal, reclaim their rights and rebuild their lives. Between 2022 and 2024, Medica Kosova assisted over 300 women in applying for "survivor status", which gives them access to pensions, healthcare and other reparations. The organization also addresses the rise in intimate partner violence, which in 2024 led to over 2,900 documented cases and three femicides.
In 2024, 43% of the UN Trust Fund's 27th grant-making cycle funding ($5.7 million) supported initiatives for crisis-affected women and girls, including a dedicated special window that channelled $4.6 million to eight organizations, with at least two-thirds of the special window projects addressing conflict-related sexual violence.
Previously, 18 initiatives supported through a funding window focused on forcibly displaced women and girls and refugees (2016-2022) reached over 35,000 refugee and/or forcibly displaced women and girls, with many also addressing sexual violence, notably in refugee camps among women fleeing conflict.