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UN

Global murder rate close to 500,000: UN report

Global homicide rates have plunged 16 percent since the beginning of the century, but nearly half a million people were still murdered worldwide in 2012, says a UN report released in Geneva on Wednesday.

Global murder rate close to 500,000: UN report
Image: WHO (detail)

Some 475,000 people were murdered around the globe that year, with the highest murder rates found in Latin America, according to the United Nations' first report on the status of violence prevention around the world.
   
Four out of five murder victims are men, and homicide remains the third cause of death among males between the ages of 15 and 44, after HIV/AIDS and road accidents, the report found.
   
Murder meanwhile drops to the fourth cause of death for the same age group when women are added to the mix.
   
Homicide rates have fallen 16 percent worldwide since year 2000, and 39 percent when only high income countries are counted, the report showed.
   
Out of the 133 countries that participated in the study, Honduras appeared to have the highest murder rate, with 103.9 homicides for every 100,000 people, while the murder rate in Venezuela stood at 57.6 and 43.9 in Colombia.
   
That compares to for instance 5.8 in the United States, 0.6 in Switzerland and 0.4 in Japan.
   
"The homicide rates are very high in Latin America", said Etienne Krug, head of violence prevention at the UN's World Health Organization.
   
This, he told reporters in Geneva, was due to a range of factors including high income inequality, easy access to firearms in some countries, and a high cultural acceptance for violence.
   
Guns are used in one in two murders committed globally, the nearly 300-page report said.
   
The impact of violence meanwhile stretches far beyond fatal incidents, according to the study, which stressed the urgent need for more decisive action from governments to prevent violence.
   
"Millions more children, women and men suffer from the far-reaching consequences of violence in our homes, schools and communities," it said, stressing that "violence shatters lives."
   
One in four children in the world has been physically abused and one in five girls has faced sexual abuse, according to the report, which also found that one in three women worldwide has been abused physically or sexually by their partner.
   
When asked, one in 17 elderly people say they have been subjected to violence in the past month.
   
"Well over a billion people are affected by violence in their lifetime, surviving it, but surviving it with a lot of consequences," Krug said, pointing not only to physical injuries, but also to psychological scars that push many into depression, substance abuse and crime and which can also lead them to commit violence themselves.

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UN

‘The war must end now’: UN Sec-Gen meets Swedish PM in Stockholm

UN Secretary General Antonio Guterres met Sweden's Prime Minister in Stockholm on Wednesday, ahead of the conference marking the 50th anniversary of the city's historic environment summit .

'The war must end now': UN Sec-Gen meets Swedish PM in Stockholm

After a bilateral meeting with Magdalena Andersson on the security situation in Europe, Guterres warned that Russia’s invasion of Ukraine could lead to a global food crisis that would hurt some of the world’s most vulnerable people. 

“It is causing immense suffering, destruction and devastation of the country. But it also inflames a three-dimensional global crisis in food, energy and finance that is pummelling the most vulnerable people, countries and economies,” the Portuguese diplomat told a joint press conference with Andersson. 

He stressed the need for “quick and decisive action to ensure a steady flow of food and energy,” including “lifting export restrictions, allocating surpluses and reserves to vulnerable populations and addressing food price increases to calm market volatility.”

Between the two, Russia and Ukraine produce around 30 percent of the global wheat supply.

Guterres was in Stockholm to take part in the Stockholm 50+ conference, which celebrates the 50th anniversary of the United Nations Conference on the Human Environment. 

The conference, which was held on the suggestion of the Swedish government in 1972 was the first UN meeting to discuss human impacts on the global environment, and led to the establishment of the UN Environment Program (UNEP). 

At the joint press conference, Andersson said that discussions continued between Sweden and Turkey over the country’s continuing opposition to Sweden’s application to join the Nato security alliance. 

“We have held discussions with Turkey and I’m looking forward to continuing the constructive meetings with Turkey in the near future,” she said, while refusing to go into detail on Turkey’s demands. 

“We are going to take the demands which have been made of Sweden directly with them, and the same goes for any misunderstandings which have arisen,” she said. 

At the press conference, Guterres condemned the Russian invasion of Ukraine as “a violation of its territorial integrity and a violation of the UN Charter”.

“The war must end now,” he said. 

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