Headlines
  • Iranian authorities have accused the United States of firing at one of Iran's commercial ships in the Gulf of Oman in violation of the two countries' ceasefire agreement.
  • US President Donald Trump stated on Sunday that the US Navy fired an Iranian ship in the Gulf of Oman and seized control of it.
  • Hours after US President Donald Trump announced he was sending negotiators to Islamabad, Iranian state media stated Tehran did not currently plan to participate in new talks with the United States.
  • In an effort to try to reach an agreement with Iran ahead of another round of face-to-face negotiations in Pakistan on Monday, U.S. Ambassador to the UN Mike Waltz backed President Donald Trump's renewed threat to eliminate Iran's electrical infrastructure and bridges.

More Details

UN Urges End to Sexual Violence in Conflict Areas

Forcibly displaced by drought and extremist violence in southwestern Somalia, Fadumo Mohamed Abdi thought she had found safety in the Puntland region’s northeastern city of Bosaso.

But one day in May 2019, while she and three other women were gathering firewood on the outskirts of their camp, they were accosted by four armed men, she said.

“The other three women managed to escape, but unfortunately I could not. They raped me repeatedly and left me unconscious,” Abdi told VOA’s Somali service in a phone conversation Friday.

Abdi was hospitalized for several days and, more than a year later, still bears trauma from the episode. Her disabled husband and their nine children had depended on her to collect fuel, but she remains too fearful to venture back into the woods. Instead, she relies on her sisters and friends.

The toll of sexual violence extends well beyond a single person or family, the United Nations said in marking Friday’s annual observance of International Day for the Elimination of Sexual Violence in Conflict.

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres arrives to attend the virtual Dag Hammarskjöld Medal and Military Gender Advocate of the Year award ceremonies, held in observance of the International Day of United Nations Peacekeepers. The theme of 2020 is “Women in Peacekeeping: A Key to Peace” on 29 May 2020- UN Photo by Eskinder Debebe

“It reverberates throughout communities and societies, perpetuating cycles of violence and threatening international peace and security,” U.N. Secretary-General António Guterres said in a statement.

The COVID-19 pandemic has heightened the challenges in areas with armed conflict, Guterres said, because “reporting crimes may be difficult; shelters and clinics may be closed.”

Guterres commended frontline workers who have found ways to support survivors “despite lockdowns and quarantines.” And, his statement concluded, “We must prevent and end these crimes; place survivors at the center of our response; hold perpetrators accountable; and expand support for all those affected.”

Abdi said that, as far as she knew, there has been no investigation and her attackers are still at large.

“We are poor. We cannot afford a lawyer” to help the family seek justice, she said.

According to U.N. Women, an estimated 35% women globally have suffered sexual violence. Risks exist even at home. The group reported in April that an estimated 243 million females experienced sexual violence by an intimate partner within a 12-month span.

In Somalia last year, 241 of 744 reported rapes involved conflict-related sexual violence, the U.N. office there found.

Rape and other acts of sexual violence often go unreported and unpunished in the Horn of Africa country, groups such as Human Rights Watch say, because of a culture of impunity and stigma.

Somalia, wracked by civil war since its central government collapsed in 1991, divided itself into regions and fiefdoms ruled by rival clan leaders and warlords. There’s no strong, common rule of law.

Legal changes

Changing attitudes have brought some legal developments.

In 2016, semiautonomous Puntland became the first regional state in Somalia to criminalize sexual assault. In February, authorities executed two men convicted of the abduction, gang rape and murder of a 12-year-old girl in 2019.

In 2018, the northern region of Somaliland passed a law that allows prison sentences of up to 30 years for convicted rapists. That same year, Somalia’s cabinet ministers drafted legislation, still being considered by the Parliament, to outlaw sexual offenses, including exploitation, trafficking, slavery and forced marriage. It would require investigations into rape allegations and ban clan-based settlements of sexual violence charges.

Abdulkadir Mohamed Warsame, an activist in Puntland, said assaults on minors have brought “a traumatic pain in the hearts of Somalis. … Although steps were taken toward bringing the culprits to justice, that is not enough to eradicate the crime,” he added, calling for establishing “a special unit that monitors sexual violence in conflict.”

An assault in April sparked a public outcry and more demands for action.

Two girls — ages 2 and 3 — were abducted from their home in Afgoye, a town about 30 kilometers southwest of Somalia’s capital, Mogadishu, in an area frequented by al-Shabab militants. The next day, a farmer found them in a field, alive but sexually assaulted and traumatized, the town’s mayor told VOA.

James Swan, the U.N.’s special representative for Somalia, is urging the country’s leaders and residents to do more “to assist and listen to victims and survivors of conflict-related sexual violence.”

“Conflict-related sexual violence inflicts deep personal wounds and remains a violation of the human rights of the victims,” he said. “It also scars the fabric of society and the country and has no place in the modern, emerging Somalia.”

VOA

Smishing

Smishing is a cyberattack that uses text messages or SMS (Short Message Service) to target users. Cybercriminals use smishing attacks to trick victims
Read More

Sinhala Hound

Credit: Facebook/American Caniner LLC Native to Sri Lanka, the Sinhala Hound is a rare and ancient dog breed.For generations, people used this breed t
Read More

Web Cache Poisoning

A cyber attack known as ” web cache poisoning” uses cache storage systems to propagate malicious data to unsuspecting users.When an attacker is succes
Read More

Subscribe Our You Tube Channel

Fighting Fake News

Fighting Lies








































Related Article

Soft Power ‘Win’ for Beijing as…

Thousands of sick, disabled and otherwise unwell queued at Wharf T over the past week, hoping to boa ...
April 16, 2026

US to Set Up Philippines Fuel…

Washington is planning a fuel depot in the southern Philippines that could support humanitarian and ...
April 11, 2026

Japan’s Combat Role in Philippines War…

Japan sending combat troops to participate in upcoming exercises in the Philippines is a signal of a ...
April 9, 2026

PNG-Australia Defense Treaty Creates Jobs, Risks…

Six months after Papua New Guinea and Australia signed a bilateral defense treaty, public opinion in ...
April 8, 2026

China-US Competition for Rare Earths Sparks…

A U.S. plan to potentially mine an area of Pacific seabed roughly the size of Nevada near two U.S. t ...
April 2, 2026

North Korean Hackers Offer $70,000 Per…

Cybersecurity engineer Toufik Airane was approached by a North Korean hacker who offered him a small ...
March 27, 2026

Other Article

Prevent Cyber Crime

Smishing

Smishing is a cyberattack that uses text messages or SMS (Short Message Service) to target users.Cyb ...
April 20, 2026
Freedom of Press

Award-Winning Burmese Journalist Shin Daewe Released…

Myanmar’s military junta Friday released award-winning documentary filmmaker and former RFA contri ...
April 18, 2026
Pick of the Day

UN Security Council Meets on Situation…

Sabino Edward Nyawella Amaikwey, Deputy Permanent Representative of South Sudan to the United Nation ...
Bizzare News

Mexican’s Zoo’s Star attraction Yuji, Abandoned…

A tiny Mexican monkey at the Guadalajara Zoo has become Mexico's newest online sensation after being ...
April 17, 2026
Pet Corner

Sinhala Hound

Native to Sri Lanka, the Sinhala Hound is a rare and ancient dog breed.For generations, people used ...
Pick of the Day

UN Permanent Representative of Israel Briefs…

Danny Danon, Permanent Representative of Israel to the United Nations, briefs reporters on the situa ...

Top