India Gate will be illuminated in orange and messages of ending violence against women will be displayed on panel boards in two high-traffic lines of the Delhi Metro as part of the UN's 'Orange the World' campaign that includes parades, soccer matches, school debates and the lighting up of hundreds of iconic monuments.
"Violence against women and girls remains one of the most serious -- and the most tolerated -- human rights violations," said UN Under Secretary-General and UN Women Executive Director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka in a statement.
Violence against women and girls affects one in three worldwide.
The call to action is part of the UN Secretary-General's' Unite to end violence against women' campaign, led by UN Women, the UN's agency for gender equality.
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The colour orange, which has come to symbolise a bright and optimistic future free from violence against women and girls, will help unify the large-scale social mobilisation.
This year's 'Orange the World' initiative will focus on the theme of preventing violence against women and girls, in the specific context of the adoption of the 2030 Sustainable Development Agenda, which includes targets on ending violence against women and girls.
Globally, during the fortnight under the 'Orange the world' call, over 450 events are planned in more than 70 countries throughout the 16 days.
The official commemoration of the International Day for
the Elimination of Violence against Women in New York will also see the launch of a landmark 'UN Framework to Underpin Action to Prevent Violence against Women' jointly developed by a number of UN entities.
According to UN Women, there has been some progress over the last few decades on the issue of violence against women with 125 countries having laws against sexual harassment and 119 against domestic violence, but only 52 countries on marital rape.
UN Women stressed that preventing and ending violence means tackling its root cause, gender inequality.
The recently adopted Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) include a goal dedicated to gender equality that aims to end all forms of discrimination against women and girls.
It recognises violence against women as an obstacle to fully achieving the Agenda for Sustainable Development and provides comprehensive indicators on what should be done to address that goal.