Ume Wainetti

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Ume Wainetti MBE , from Papua New Guinea (PNG), was the National Coordinator of the PNG Family and Sexual Violence Action Committee (FSVAC).

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Activities

Sibaio Ume Wainetti was National Coordinator of the PNG Family and Sexual Violence Action Committee (FSVAC) from 2002 to 2017. FSVAC was set up in 2000 to be the principal national body to coordinate activities to address family and sexual violence in Papua New Guinea. It is believed that the majority of women in Papua New Guinea have been beaten or raped by a partner or family member. The goal of FSVAC is to reduce the occurrence and suffering caused by physical, sexual and psychological violence within families and increasing access to support services and justice for survivors of family and sexual violence. The committee seeks to develop programmes that prevent and respond to violence against women and girls, providing healthcare, refuge and legal services, as well as counselling. [1] [2]

Under Wainetti’s guidance, FSVAC was able to ensure the introduction of a Family Violence Law in PNG, and a new National Strategy on Gender-Based Violence was developed. In 2011, following investigations that confirmed that women had been raped by security guards at the Porgera Gold Mine in Enga Province, Wainetti, together with Dame Carol Kidu, was responsible the process of compensating survivors. [3]

Wainetti is now a board advisor to the PNG Counselling Association. This association arose out of work carried out to support victims of sexual violence, when it was recognised that the lack of qualified counsellors was a weakness in the support being provided. The association has established a training curriculum and a one-year diploma course, as well as a national qualification framework, and quality assurance system for counsellors. [4] [5] [6]

Awards and honours

Related Research Articles

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Initiatives to prevent sexual violence

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Development Policy Centre

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Papua New Guinea (PNG) is often labelled as potentially the worst place in the world for gender-based violence.

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Women's rights in Papua New Guinea are severely restricted due to poverty, violence, limited access to education and health care, and patriarchal cultural practices, especially witch hunts. Cases of violence against women in PNG are under reported, due mainly to gender-based violence being socially legitimized. There is also a lack of services for women who experience violence. There are reports of sexual abuse by police officers, on arrest and whilst in police custody. These incidents lack documentation or investigation, consequently, perpetrators are rarely prosecuted or punished. The government of Papua New Guinea (PNG) has introduced legislation to combat these issues, though with limited success.

Papua New Guinea at the 2020 Summer Olympics Sporting event delegation

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Sarah Haoda Todd is an entrepreneur, fashion designer, and activist from Lae, Papua New Guinea. After starting a cleaning business in 1997, Haoda Todd went on to become a fashion designer, basing her designs on the art, culture, materials, and symbols of Morobe Province and Papua New Guinea. She is also one of the founders of Arise Women, an organization that fights against violence affecting women and children.

Lesley McMillan, FRSE, professor of Criminology and Sociology at Glasgow Caledonian University (GCU), associate director of the Scottish Institute for Policing Research, and associate director of the Centre for Research in Families and Relationships based at the University of Edinburgh, researches gender-based violence and criminal justice systems. She influenced reforms in police training for best practice when dealing with traumatised rape or sexual violence survivors, and was behind a multimedia campaign "Erase the Grey" which challenges traditional views on gender-based violence.

Fiona Sonia Karejo Hukula is a Papua New Guinean activist. She advocates against gender-based violence, including women accused of witchcraft or sorcery.

Tessie Soi is known throughout Papua New Guinea (PNG) as the founder of Friends Foundation, an organization that supports people suffering from HIV/AIDS. She later became involved in supporting victims of family and sexual violence.

Ruth Kissam is a community organizer and a human rights activist who has focused on Sorcery Accusation Related Violence (SRV) in Papua New Guinea. She was awarded the Westpac Outstanding Woman (WOW) Award in Papua New Guinea in 2018.


Mary Kini is a human rights and peace activist in Papua New Guinea (PNG). She is a co-founder and the coordinator of Kup Women for Peace, an organization of women dedicated to addressing the problem of tribal fights in the Kup area of PNG.

Susan Setae is a women's rights advocate from Papua New Guinea (PNG). She is the president of the PNG Counselling Association and former president of the National Council of Women.

Freda Talao is a human rights lawyer and development specialist from Papua New Guinea (PNG).

Sarah Garap is a prominent community development worker and human rights activist in the Highlands of Papua New Guinea (PNG).

Avia Koisen is a lawyer from Papua New Guinea (PNG) who runs her own law firm. She was a founder member of Papua New Guinea Women in Chamber of Commerce and Industry (PNGWCCI) and has been its president. She is a campaigner against gender-based violence in the country.

References

  1. "YOU NEED TO KNOW THESE WOMEN SHINING IN OUR REGION THIS WEEK". International Women's Development Agency. Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  2. "Video: Ume Wainetti speaks at ANU on FSV in PNG". FemiliPNG. Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  3. "OLGETA MERI IGAT RAITS? (ALL WOMEN HAVE RIGHTS?)". Enviro Society. Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  4. "Counsellors in Papua New Guinea offer hope to survivors of gender-based violence". Spotlight Initiative. Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  5. "Offering Hope for Survivors of Gender – Based Violence through Counselling". United Nations. Retrieved 7 November 2021.
  6. "The Family and Sexual Violence Action Committee (FSVAC)". development aid. Retrieved 7 November 2021.