A recent United Nations report has unveiled a harrowing reality of gender-based violence in Latin America and the Caribbean, with over 19,000 women killed in the past five years. The Economic Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC) disclosed that 3,828 women lost their lives in 2024 alone, averaging approximately 11 deaths per day. The majority of these murders were perpetrated by current or former intimate partners, highlighting the pervasive issue of domestic violence in the region. Honduras, Guatemala, and the Dominican Republic recorded the highest femicide rates, while Chile reported the lowest. In Belize, the Crime Observatory documented nine femicides in 2024, including a recent incident where a Coast Guard officer allegedly stabbed a woman multiple times, leaving her hospitalized. This incident occurred on the eve of the global ’16 Days of Activism’ campaign against gender-based violence. ECLAC’s Executive Secretary, José Manuel Salazar-Xirinachs, condemned the statistics as ‘unacceptable levels of gender-based violence’ and called for urgent governmental action. He emphasized that femicide is not merely a criminal issue but a profound human rights crisis that hinders societal progress and equality. Although most countries in the region have enacted laws to combat gender-based violence, the UN has cautioned that enforcement remains inconsistent and inadequate.
