Sexual harassment and even violence against female parliamentarians is widespread, a report from a global parliamentary grouping suggests.
The study by the Inter Parliamentary Union (IPU) is being released during the group’s annual assembly in Geneva.
Just 55 female MPs took part in the survey, but they represent parliaments from across the globe.
Over 80% said they had experienced some form of psychological or sexual harassment or violence.
Rape threats
The report from the IPU comes at a time when US Presidential candidate Donald Trump’s comments about his opponent, Hillary Clinton, and his alleged sexual harassment of other women over the years, have been making headlines.
It reveals some of the abuse female politicians around the world face while fulfilling their roles in elected positions.
A European member of parliament reported receiving more than 500 threats of rape on Twitter in the space of just four days.
Another, from Asia, received threats of violence to her son, detailing his school, his class, and his age.
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Of the women who took part in the survey, 65.5% said they had been the target of insults using sexual language and imagery. The report suggested humiliating remarks from male colleagues were commonplace.
“In my part of the world… there is all sorts of language that is associated with female parliamentarians,” says Prof Nkandu Luo, currently minister of gender in Zambia.
She recalls a male member of parliament publicly recounting that he liked to go to parliament because “all the women are there and I can just point and choose which one I want”.
The remarks, Professor Luo said, were reported in the press as something amusing and acceptable. “It’s the way they demean women.”
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