Speech: Justice goes beyond the courtroom to encompass accessible, coordinated, and adequately resourced systems

Remarks by UN Women Executive Director Sima Bahous at the CSW high-level meeting on the occasion of the 5th anniversary of the Group of Friends for the Elimination of Violence against Women and Girls, 12 March 2026, UN Headquarters.

[As delivered.]

It is an honour to join you here today to mark the five years of the Group of Friends for the Elimination of Violence against Women and Girls. Very difficult to speak after these two wonderful speakers, which we heard just before, but I will continue to proceed with my speech.

The Group, this Group, was born of crisis and instability during COVID. Today that sense of crisis and instability is changed but it is not diminished.

Conflict has intensified. Democratic spaces are contracting. Digital technologies outpace safeguards, facilitating old forms of violence while making possible new ones. Prevalence remains of violence against women and girls horrific, with one in three women reporting lifetime physical or sexual violence.

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UN Women Executive Director Sima Bahous delivers remarks at the CSW high-level meeting on the occasion of the 5th anniversary of the Group of Friends for the Elimination of Violence against Women and Girls, 12 March 2026, UN Headquarters. Photo: UN Women/Ryan Brown.
UN Women Executive Director Sima Bahous delivers remarks at the CSW high-level meeting on the occasion of the 5th anniversary of the Group of Friends for the Elimination of Violence against Women and Girls, 12 March 2026, UN Headquarters. Photo: UN Women/Ryan Brown.

We have not been idle. Since 2019, 90 per cent of Member States have strengthened laws on violence against women and girls. Seventy-nine per cent have updated or expanded national action plans. Now we need action.

Despite this, too many survivors encounter fragmented and biased systems across police, across courts, across health services, and social protection. Too many lack access to legal aid. Less than 10 per cent report violence because it feels futile or unsafe to report it, thereby undermining deterrence and fuelling impunity.

And the strong feminist movements and organizations we depend on are ever-more underfunded. UN Women’s analysis shows us that over one third are suspending programmes addressing violence, and almost all reporting severe reductions in women’s and girls’ access to essential services.

We have spent the past few days discussing access to justice—the priority theme of this 70th session of the Commission on the Status of Women.

We applaud the agreed conclusions that were adopted by a large majority on Monday, calling for greater justice, increased accountability, better protection for all women and girls.

Justice, as you know, goes beyond the courtroom to encompass accessible, coordinated, and adequately resourced systems, centred on survivors’ needs and dignity.

And I will quote just a few data points:

So, we really need to act and to act fast.

Also, it is about budgeted national action plans and trained institutions. It is about prevention, accountability, and the clear signal that violence will not and will never be tolerated.

And UN Women, as you all know, works with Member States in all these areas and more.

Through the Spotlight Initiative, for example, which was supported by the EU [European Union], we have seen that when the UN acts together, it delivers major results. The UN’s unique strength lies in its ability to connect international commitments to real change in people’s lives. Between 2019 and 2024, coordinated UN action through Spotlight Initiative helped reform 548 laws related to violence against women and girls and gender equality, and doubled conviction rates in 13 countries. That is good, but we still have a long way to go.

With the leadership and support of governments and partners represented here today, and through initiatives like the EU-funded ACT to End Violence Against Women Programme, UN Women and the UN Trust Fund have strengthened feminist leadership, resilience, and institutional capacities of hundreds of CSOs [civil society organizations], facilitated evidence-based advocacy, and influenced legal change.

So, maintaining such progress depends on sustained political will, political leadership, and also investment.

With 96 Member States, this Group of Friends is a powerful force. It can drive visibility and momentum, keeping ending violence against women and girls at the top of a crowded agenda, and championing effective national approaches. It can also demand resources, including for the essential work of women’s rights organizations.

These five years have been inspiring. I thank the European Union for your leadership, and Member State leaders and the Secretary-General for their continued commitment. UN Women will continue to support this Group’s work with pride.

I believe we can go even further in the next five years. I believe we can outpace our challenges, accelerate our actions, surpass each success with the next.

That is our task and it is [our] responsibility. It is what we owe the women and girls of the world and what we owe humanity. And it is within our power to make this real.

I urge us all to vigorously sustain and deepen our partnerships towards this end.

And I thank you.