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Section
Women and war
Section covering the specific dangers and suffering confronting women in wartime, whose plight could be improved if the rules of humanitarian law were fully respected. Access to the ICRC study Women facing war as well as related resource materials and links to other sites concerning women.
© ICRC / V. Louis / v-p-u-e-00514
Chechnya. A woman showing a photo of her son, who disappeared in 2002 during riots in their village.

Countless women and girls all over the world suffer the trauma of war - as widows or orphans, perhaps displaced from their homes, sometimes detained. They are often separated from loved ones and become victims of violence and intimidation.
For the most part they are civilians caught in the crossfire, and show astonishing resourcefulness and resilience in coping with the disintegration of their families, the loss of their home and their belongings and the destruction of their lives.

Women can also be fighters, and as such are due the same respect as men if wounded or captured. They are also bound by the same rules prohibiting illegal acts against other fighters or civilians.


International humanitarian law, which grants general protection to all war victims, regardless of gender, provides extensive specific protection for women in war. If these rules were better observed, the suffering faced by women in war would be greatly reduced.

See also

  • Women and international humanitarian law (includes ICRC official statements)


  • Contact:

    Key document
      26-6-2008
      Confronting sexual violence as a method of warfare
      The UN Security Council adopted a new resolution in June demanding that those engaged in conflict take action to halt rape and other forms of sexual violence against civilians. The ICRC's legal adviser on women and war, Jean-Marie Henckaerts, talks about the importance of this step and its likely impact.
      (Humanitarian law\Women and war)
      Interview Includes Photo

      29-2-2008
      Women and the Missing: living between hope and despair
      A large majority of those who disappear or are killed in armed conflict or other situations of violence are men, and thus the burden and anguish of clarifying their fate falls to the women left behind. This collection of images and text describes the ordeals women face when their male relatives go missing and what the ICRC is doing to support them.
      (Info resources\Photos)
      Photo Collection Includes Photo

      28-2-2008
      Women and war
      This publication looks at the ways in which women can be affected by conflict and the actions taken by the ICRC to take their specific needs into account. It also promotes those rules of international humanitarian law which provide specific protection for women in war.
      (Info resources\ICRC publications and films\Publications\Protection)
      ICRC Publication Includes PDF

      28-2-2008
      Women and the Missing: the burden of those left behind
      On the occasion of International Women’s Day (8 March), Florence Tercier, ICRC’s women and war adviser, explains the immensely challenging plight of women whose male relatives have gone missing in war and what the ICRC is doing to support them.
      (Focus\Women and war)
      Interview Includes Photo

      2-3-2007
      Women and war: the ICRC's response
      The ICRC is dedicated to preserving the lives and dignity of people affected by armed conflict and internal strife, to aid those suffering the consequences of war and to act as the guardian and promoter of international humanitarian law. Recognizing that conflicts have a different impact on men, women, children and the elderly, and deeply concerned about the nature and magnitude of the violations committed against women in recent conflicts, the ICRC pledged in 1999, to assess the needs of women and girls and to promote respect for them, with a particular focus on sexual violence.
      (Focus\Women and war)

    Feature
      29-2-2008
      Iran: long years of incertitude and anguish
      During the Iran-Iraq war of 1980-88, tens of thousands of soldiers went missing on both sides. In Iran alone, the families of some 11,000 people continue to wait for news. Close-up on three Iranian women who have lived through the pain of uncertainty.
      (Focus\Women and war)
      Feature Includes Photo

      29-2-2008
      Nepal: the long, lonely wait of Sunamati
      One night, armed men came to Sunamati's house in mid-western Nepal and left with her husband. Since then, six years have passed without news of him. The mother of three ekes out a living and hopes, one day, for news.
      (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Nepal)
      Feature Includes Photo

      29-2-2008
      Argentina: “some atrocities are too awful to contemplate”
      Bárbara Noailles is a doctor. She was just seven years old when her father, a mechanic, was abducted from his workshop in Buenos Aires in October 1976 and “disappeared”.
      (Focus\Women and war)
      Feature

      29-2-2008
      Peru: "my hope and my reason for existing"
      In the 1980s and 1990s, Peru experienced an internal armed conflict between the army and police on one hand and insurgent groups on the other. It is now estimated that some 13,000 people went missing during those years. Juana Huaytalla Méndez, who has attended psychosocial support groups run by the Child and Family Network with ICRC backing, tells her story.
      (Focus\Women and war)
      Feature Includes Photo

      29-2-2008
      Dzidza's story: years of torment waiting to learn the fate of her entire family
      More than 12 years after the war in Bosnia ended, some 16,000 people* are still unaccounted for, leaving their surviving relatives in a state of permanent anguish. Journalist Nick Danziger describes the pain of Dzidza, whose family disappeared in the 1995 Srebrenica massacres.
      (Focus\Women and war)
      Feature Includes Photo

      29-2-2008
      Olja's story: a missing husband, an interrupted life and no way out
      A decade of armed conflicts in the Balkans in the 1990s caused thousands of people to disappear. The following is one woman's story of the pain of a husband gone missing, of holding out hope in vain, and the support that helped her get through it all.
      (Focus\Women and war)
      Feature Includes Photo

      20-12-2007
      Eastern DRC: widespread sexual violence against women threatens families
      Countless women in the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo have fallen prey to sexual violence carried out by armed bands. The ICRC provides support to local groups which help traumatized women recover. Bernard Barrett reports on the scourge of Kivu and meets two of the victims.
      (The ICRC worldwide\Africa\Congo-Kinshasa)
      Feature Includes Photo

      31-10-2007
      Afghanistan: on the frontline of health care
      Sharifa Seddiqi is a most unusual woman. Not only is she the sole female surgeon in Afghanistan's war-ravaged southern province of Kandahar, she also runs Mirwais hospital in Kandahar, the main hospital in the region.
      (The ICRC worldwide\Asia and the Pacific\Afghanistan)
      Feature

      2-3-2007
      Democratic Republic of the Congo: "I want my child and me to be accepted"
      A group of South Kivu women who were abducted by armed groups, raped and mistreated are struggling to survive and to protect their children born of sexual violence. ICRC delegate Fabienne Garaud talked to one of them.
      (The ICRC worldwide\Africa\Congo-Kinshasa)
      Feature

      27-2-2007
      Uganda: a lesson in courage given by women
      In northern Uganda, almost 1.5 million people, most of whom are Acholis, have had to abandon their villages and their fields and seek refuge in camps for internally displaced persons. Some of them have been living in these camps for ten years. They have tried to recreate a community there. But it has been difficult.
      (Focus\Women and war)
      Feature Includes Photo

      27-2-2007
      Women in Iraq: “Like being inside a big prison”
      The plight of women in Iraq is of growing concern, with increasing reports of murders, rapes and kidnappings, as well as general intimidation and oppression. Three Iraqi women give their views on living under the threat of violence.
      (The ICRC worldwide\Middle East and North Africa\Iraq)
      Feature Includes Photo

      31-1-2007
      Sierra Leone: shelter-for-war-widows brings hope to a woman
      The war in Sierra Leone displaced hundreds of thousands of victims, the majority of whom fled to neighbouring Guinea and Liberia. They left behind a plethora of humanitarian problems, including wanton destruction of life and property.
      (The ICRC worldwide\Africa\Sierra Leone)
      Feature

    ICRC film
      27-2-2007
      Colombia: searching for safety
      Colombia has been ravaged by over four decades of armed conflict. An estimated three million people have fled violence in the countryside. In this film, we meet Carmen, Maria and Anna who have moved to Bogota in search of safety. They survive, despite their minimal income and the constant fear of further violence, receiving some help from the ICRC's emergency assistance programme.
      (Info resources\ICRC publications and films\Films\From the field)
      ICRC film Includes Video

      26-2-2007
      Liberia: homecoming in Gorlu
      After 14 years of war, the villagers of Gorlu in Lofa County are finally starting to come home. But life is hard, especially for the women. Lofo, grandmother of seven, was forced out of the village 10 years ago and she's lost everything. But with tolerance and humour, she is determined to put down her roots again. With some assistance from the ICRC, her new house gradually takes shape.
      (Info resources\ICRC publications and films\Films\From the field)
      ICRC film Includes Video

      26-2-2007
      Women fleeing war
      Armed conflict displaces people from their homes and livelihoods. Women often have to cope with the loss of close relatives and find new way to support themselves and their families. The ICRC works to understand the specific needs of women displaced by war, in order to better help them. This film tells the story of five women displaced by conflict in Colombia, Liberia and Sudan. Although the contexts are different, the challenges these women face bear striking similarities.
      (Info resources\ICRC publications and films\Films\Protection)
      ICRC film Includes Video

      1-12-2006
      Congo Kinshasa: the hidden battlefield
      Brutal rape has become commonplace in some parts of the eastern Democratic Republic of Congo, an area plagued by warring groups who prey on local people with little fear of retaliation.
      (Info resources\ICRC publications and films\Films\From the field)
      ICRC film Includes Video

      31-12-2001
      Women facing war
      Eleven women tell their own individual stories of how their lives have been affected by war. Coping with displacement, physical and sexual violence, missing relatives, widowhood, detention... challenges and difficulties that these and thousands of other women must face in their daily lives.
      (Info resources\ICRC publications and films\Films\Protection)
      ICRC film Includes Video

    ICRC Publication
      23-2-2007
      Internally displaced people
      The displacement of people within their own countries owing to war or natural disasters is a matter of growing concern worldwide. This concern is amply justified: time and again, internally displaced people (IDPs) suffer extreme hardship that jeopardizes their very survival.
      (Info resources\ICRC publications and films\Publications\Protection)
      ICRC Publication Includes PDF

      31-5-2005
      Antenatal guidelines for primary health care in crisis conditions
      Within the area of mother and childcare, antenatal care plays a key role in reducing death, disease and suffering among women, whose vulnerability is always exacerbated by armed conflict and poor security conditions. These Antenatal guidelines for primary health care in crisis conditions provide field staff with basic practical information they need to run an antenatal clinic in situations that may vary greatly from one country to another. The handbook deal only with first level of health care, that is to say the community health centre, and not with the second and third levels (reference and district hospitals)
      (Info resources\ICRC publications and films\Publications\Assistance)
      ICRC Publication Includes PDF

      2-3-2004
      Addressing the needs of women affected by armed conflict: an ICRC guidance document
      Building upon the ICRC study Women Facing War, this guidance document intends to translate the findings of the study into practical terms. Aimed at staff concerned with the planning and implementation of humanitarian programmes, this document is intended as a means of sharing ICRC's experience in this area with other organisations. It is an important tool which can be used to address women's needs on an operational level, illustrating best practices and lessons learned.
      (Info resources\ICRC publications and films\Publications\Protection)
      ICRC Publication Includes PDF

      31-12-2001
      Women facing war
      This ICRC study is an extensive reference document on the impact of armed conflict on the lives of women. Taking as its premise the needs of women, e.g. physical safety, access to health care, food and shelter, in situations of armed conflict, the study explores the problems faced by women in wartime and the coping mechanisms they employ. A thorough analysis of international humanitarian law, and to a lesser extent human rights and refugee law, was carried out as a means to assess the protection afforded to women through these bodies of law. The study also includes a review of the ICRC's operational response to the needs of women as victims of armed conflict. Overview of contents and executive summary
      (Info resources\ICRC publications and films\Publications\Protection)
      ICRC publication Includes PDF

    Interview
      20-12-2007
      Sexual violence in the Democratic Republic of the Congo: victims on trial
      Over the past 10 years, rape and sexual assault have been perpetrated on a regular basis by armed groups operating in the Democratic Republic of the Congo. In recent years, sexual violence has also been committed by civilians and former fighters. Most of these crimes go unpunished. Nancy Baudoin, who recently completed an assignment in the country as a psychosocial delegate, talks about how the ICRC assists the victims.
      (The ICRC worldwide\Africa\Congo-Kinshasa)
      Interview Includes PDF, Photo

      2-11-2007
      Congo-Kinshasa: dramatic humanitarian impact of ongoing fighting
      Yann Bonzon is in charge of ICRC operations in Goma. He explains what the ICRC is doing for the victims of the fighting and denounces the numerous incidents of abuse of the civilian population, in particular the many cases of sexual violence.
      (The ICRC worldwide\Africa\Congo-Kinshasa)
      Interview Includes Photo

      26-2-2007
      Women displaced by war
      On the occasion of International Women's Day (8 March), Florence Tercier, ICRC's women and war adviser, explains why the plight of displaced women is a particularly difficult one.
      (Focus\Women and war)
      Interview Includes Photo

    Official Statement
      17-11-2007
      Advancement of Women
      United Nations, General Assembly, 62nd session, Third Committee, Item 63 (a) of the agenda, Statement by the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC), New York, 15-17 Octobre 2007
      (ICRC Activities\Humanitarian diplomacy\United Nations\62nd General Assembly)
      Official Statement

      3-11-1999
      To promote the respect of women in armed conflicts
      Pledge Statement of the ICRC at the 27th International Conference of the Red Cross and Red Crescent
      (Focus\RC Movement\International Conference\27th Conference)
      Official Statement

    Photo Collection
      26-2-2007
      Women and displacement: bearing the burden
      Women bear the brunt of the burden of displacement, having to strike a delicate balance between the risks they run in often hostile environments and the imperative to provide for the immediate needs of the family. This gallery provides a glimpse of contexts from around the world in which the ICRC is active and in which courageous women come together in their struggle to survive in sometimes impossibly difficult environments.
      (Info resources\Photos)
      Photo Collection Includes Photo

    Report
    Video Collection
      31-8-2007
      ICRC and TVRL win the 2007 CNN World Report Award "Best News Report"
      On 19 June 2007, an independent panel of media professionals awarded the prize of Best News report to the Télévision Région Lausannoise (TVRL) and the International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) for a co-produced report called 'Rape Violence in the DR Congo'. The item was broadcast on CNN International on 4 and 5 November 2006.
      (Info resources\Video)
      Video Collection Includes Video

    More in this section
      1-3-2007
      Women in war: a particularly vulnerable group?
      Women are often considered particularly vulnerable in conflict situations. And yet they often prove to be surprisingly strong and remarkably ingenious at coping with difficulties. In any given situation, the ICRC assesses risk and vulnerability so that it can give help to those in greatest need as a matter of priority.
      (Focus\Women and war)
      Includes Photo

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    9-07-2008