The list was included in a report to the UN Security Council circulated yesterday.
It includes mainly opposition and rebel groups from nine countries but also government military and police forces in Congo, Somalia and South Sudan and armed forces in Sudan and Syria. Also on the list is Boko Haram, which operates in Nigeria and neighbouring countries.
The report says sexual violence as a war tactic was widespread in 2016 with rapes allegedly committed by several parties to conflict, mostly in conjunction with other crimes from killings to looting and forced displacement.
He said patterns of sexual violence have also been seen in urban warfare during house searches, operations in residential areas and at checkpoints.
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For example, the report names 13 rebel groups in Congo as well as the army and national police.
In 2016, it said the UN peacekeeping mission in Congo verified 514 cases of conflict-related sexual violence against 340 women, 170 girls, three men and one boy.
In South Sudan, which has been engulfed in conflict since December 2013, the report said the UN peacekeeping mission documented 577 incidents of sexual violence including rape, gang rape and sexual slavery.
"The survivors included 57 girls, several of whom were below 10 years of age, with two being less than one year old," it said.
The report said the overall trends "point to an alarming increase in the number of rapes, with 20 per cent more victims seeking services following sexual assault."
The incidents included 151 rapes, of which 54 were gang rapes, as well as six forced marriages and four cases of sexual slavery, the report said.
"The victims included 92 women, 86 girls and one boy although the actual number is suspected to be far higher than the figures reported," it said.
"Victims of conflict-related sexual violence were generally assaulted in their homes, en route to markets or fields, and in and around displacement camps.