Improving support for women and girl survivors of sexual and gender-based violence

Date:

[Media Release]
Ministry of Women, Youth, Children and Family Affairs

Honiara, Solomon Islands – Support for women and girl survivors of sexual and gender-based violence continues to improve as SAFENET Referral Network (SAFENET) member numbers continue to increase.

SAFENET consists of government and non-government organisations who provide services for survivors of sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV).

In Solomon Islands a police sergeant responding to police service issues raised by SAFENET members. Photo: UN Women/ Doris Puiahi

This escalation in support for SAFENET follows last week’s completion of a nine-province series of workshop consultations held over two months, coupled with the network’s recent quarterly meeting that attracted more than 40 participants challenging each other to improve their services.

New members include representatives from local civil society, women and faith-based groups who play a key role in referring survivors of gender-based violence to support services who live in remote villages.

“It’s so exciting to see SAFENET growing stronger, bigger, more coordinated and become truly survivor-centred!” said SAFENET Coordinator, Juliana Zutu. 

“This approach brings a lot of hope to women and girls who are survivors of Gender-Based Violence”.

The 40 participants who attended the quarterly meeting, held on 5th to 6th June 2019 in Honiara, focussed on the SAFENET approach to ensure all frontline service providers – from police to hospital, social welfare and crisis centre staff – are better coordinated and continuously improve the quality of their services.

The regular meeting enables the network members to progress their work to strengthen response, referral and coordination of Sexual and Gender Based Violence (SGBV) services in the Solomon Islands.

“It’s interesting to see how these regular meetings are turning into avenues where Gender-Based Violence service providers across the different sectors - such as police and health and social welfare - are monitoring their own members’ services against SAFENET’s best practice and protocols.

“SAFENET members are using this forum to professionally learn from each other, challenge each other, and even suggest best practice solutions to each other, to ensure we each offer “no harm” service practices that are in the best interest of the victim,” said SAFENET Coordinator, Juliana Zutu. 

SAFENT members and partners gather at the quarterly meeting. Photo: Solomon Islands MWYCFA

In Solomon Islands, data indicates about 64 per cent[1] of the nation’s women experience physical or sexual intimate partner violence - twice the global average.

Supervising Director, Ministry of Women Youth Children and Family Affairs (MWYCFA), Women’s Development Division, Vaela Ngai, said: “By better coordinating referrals for survivors, and more clearly linking and connecting frontline services, we significantly increase the likelihood of women and girl survivors getting the quality help they need, when they need it.”

SAFENET has been operating in Solomon Islands since 2008 – formalised via a Memorandum of Understanding (MoU) in 2013 – and over the past eight years, the network’s members have developed the SAFENET Standard Operating Procedures; SAFENET governance systems; minimum standards and data collection; and SAFENET guiding principles and survivor-centred approaches. The network’s survivor-centred approach is clearly outlined in the SAFENET Guidebook of Standard Operating Procedures for the Multisectoral Response, Referral and Coordination of Sexual and Gender Based Violence (GBV), launched late 2018 and being shared nationally in 2019 through provincial consultations.

Members of the SAFENET network are: Ministry of Women, Youth, Children and Family Affairs; Ministry of Health and Medical Services; Royal Solomon Islands Police Force; Public Solicitors Office; Family Support Center; Christian Care Center; and Solomon Islands Planned Parenthood Association.

The SAFENET is led by the MWYCFA in partnership with UN Women - through the Pacific Partnership to End Violence Against Women and Girls (Pacific Partnership) funded by the European Union and Australian Government with support from UN Women – and in collaboration with UN agencies and partners particularly the United Nations Population Fund (UNFPA), United Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF) and World Health Organization (WHO). The Ministry is very thankful to European Union, Australian Government and UN Women and other donors and partners for their support. This support ensures that issues of prevention and access to essential services by survivors of SGBV at rural and remote areas are beginning to be addressed and improved,” said SAFENET Coordinator, Juliana Zutu.

Media enquiries should be directed to:

Ministry of Women, Youth, Children and Family Affairs (MWYCFA): Information and Networking Officer, Mary Kivo: phone- 23544/7380645, email - MKivo@mwycfa.gov.sb or for SAFENET Coordinator (WDD), Juliana Zutu: phone – 23544/7654096, email – JZutu@mwycfa.gov.sb

For information on funding and support for SAFENET and Pacific Partnership in the Solomon Islands: UN Women Solomon Islands, Doris Puiahi - doris.puiahi@unwomen.org or Alvina Erekali -alvina.erekali@unwomen.org

BACKGROUND INFORMATION
SAFENET: SAFENET is a network of government and non-government organizations aiming to strengthen referral and coordination of sexual and gender-based violence (SGBV) services in the Solomon Islands. It aims to streamline the assistance being provided to survivors and help them access more timely and necessary services.  

It has four inter-connected components: SGBV direct services and support; referral to other service providers through an agreed and coordinated formal referral process; prevention and advocacy programmes; and a governance and accountability framework. The SAFENET network is led by the Ministry of Women, Youth, Children and Family Affairs (MWYCFA) supported by UN Women, through the Pacific Partnership to End Violence Against Women and Girls (Pacific Partnership).

Pacific Partnership to End Violence Against Women and Girls: The Pacific Partnership to End Violence Against Women and Girls (Pacific Partnership) brings together governments, civil society organisations, communities and other partners to promote gender equality, prevent violence against women and girls (VAWG), and increase access to quality response services for survivors. The programme will build on the decades of work led in the region by civil society and governments to address this issue. The EUR 19.5million programme is funded primarily by the European Union (EUR 12.7m) with targeted support from the Australian Government (EUR 6.2m) and cost-sharing from UN Women (EUR 0.6m). The Pacific Partnership is being jointly coordinated by the Pacific Community (SPC), the Pacific Islands Forum Secretariat (Forum Secretariat) and UN Women Fiji Multi-Country Office.

 


[1] Findings from the Solomon Islands Family Health and Safety Studies (FHSS): A study on violence against women and children. Conducted by UNFPA and the Pacific Community (SPC) across 11 Pacific countries including Solomon Islands. Studies are online: http://pacific.unfpa.org/en/publications?page=0%2C1