• India CSR Awards 2025
  • India CSR Leadership Summit
  • Guest Posts
Sunday, May 31, 2026
India CSR
  • Home
  • Corporate Social Responsibility
    • Art & Culture
    • CSR Leaders
    • Child Rights
    • Culture
    • Education
    • Gender Equality
    • Around the World
    • Skill Development
    • Safety
    • Covid-19
    • Safe Food For All
  • Sustainability
    • Sustainability Dialogues
    • Sustainability Knowledge Series
    • Plastics
    • Sustainable Development Goals
    • ESG
    • Circular Economy
    • BRSR
  • Corporate Governance
    • Diversity & Inclusion
  • Interviews
  • SDGs
    • No Poverty
    • Zero Hunger
    • Good Health & Well-Being
    • Quality Education
    • Gender Equality
    • Clean Water & Sanitation – SDG 6
    • Affordable & Clean Energy
    • Decent Work & Economic Growth
    • Industry, Innovation & Infrastructure
    • Reduced Inequalities
    • Sustainable Cities & Communities
    • Responsible Consumption & Production
    • Climate Action
    • Life Below Water
    • Life on Land
    • Peace, Justice & Strong Institutions
    • Partnerships for the Goals
  • Articles
  • Events
  • हिंदी
  • More
    • Business
    • Finance
    • Environment
    • Economy
    • Health
    • Around the World
    • Social Sector Leaders
    • Social Entrepreneurship
    • Trending News
      • Important Days
        • Festivals
      • Great People
      • Product Review
      • International
      • Sports
      • Entertainment
    • Case Studies
    • Philanthropy
    • Biography
    • Technology
    • Lifestyle
    • Sports
    • Gaming
    • Knowledge
    • Home Improvement
    • Words Power
    • Chief Ministers
No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Corporate Social Responsibility
    • Art & Culture
    • CSR Leaders
    • Child Rights
    • Culture
    • Education
    • Gender Equality
    • Around the World
    • Skill Development
    • Safety
    • Covid-19
    • Safe Food For All
  • Sustainability
    • Sustainability Dialogues
    • Sustainability Knowledge Series
    • Plastics
    • Sustainable Development Goals
    • ESG
    • Circular Economy
    • BRSR
  • Corporate Governance
    • Diversity & Inclusion
  • Interviews
  • SDGs
    • No Poverty
    • Zero Hunger
    • Good Health & Well-Being
    • Quality Education
    • Gender Equality
    • Clean Water & Sanitation – SDG 6
    • Affordable & Clean Energy
    • Decent Work & Economic Growth
    • Industry, Innovation & Infrastructure
    • Reduced Inequalities
    • Sustainable Cities & Communities
    • Responsible Consumption & Production
    • Climate Action
    • Life Below Water
    • Life on Land
    • Peace, Justice & Strong Institutions
    • Partnerships for the Goals
  • Articles
  • Events
  • हिंदी
  • More
    • Business
    • Finance
    • Environment
    • Economy
    • Health
    • Around the World
    • Social Sector Leaders
    • Social Entrepreneurship
    • Trending News
      • Important Days
        • Festivals
      • Great People
      • Product Review
      • International
      • Sports
      • Entertainment
    • Case Studies
    • Philanthropy
    • Biography
    • Technology
    • Lifestyle
    • Sports
    • Gaming
    • Knowledge
    • Home Improvement
    • Words Power
    • Chief Ministers
No Result
View All Result
India CSR
No Result
View All Result
Home Articles

This International Women’s Day Let Us Not Forget That Women Are The Hidden Casualties of War 

India CSR by India CSR
March 7, 2022
in Articles
Reading Time: 5 mins read
Photo: UN IWD

Photo: UN IWD

Share Share Share Share
WhatsApp icon
WhatsApp — Join Us
Instant updates & community
Google News icon
Google News — Follow Us
Get our articles in Google News feed

By Sangeeta Waldron

This year’s International Women’s Day theme is, “Gender equality today for a sustainable tomorrow”, where it recognizes the contribution of women and girls around the world, who are leading the charge on climate change adaptation, mitigation, and response, to build a more sustainable future for all. However, for this International Women’s Day on 8 March, I am going to go rogue and talk about how women are impacted by armed warfare. I have been haunted by the harrowing photos and images coming from the Ukraine of people fleeing their homes, who are mainly women and children. I have been looking around my house, wondering what I would pack in that moment of crisis, what impossible choices would I make, and I bet you have been doing the same.

Throughout history, women and girls have often been targeted in wartime for violence, especially sexual violence, and things will be no different for the women in Ukraine. Let us also remember that women don’t usually start wars, but they do suffer heavily from the consequences. Conflict spurs much higher rates of sexual violence. It makes women more vulnerable to poverty, the loss of jobs and the destruction of assets such as homes.

In the days since Russia launched a military offensive in Ukraine, there have been images of women giving birth in underground stations, new-borns hastily being moved to makeshift bomb shelters as health facilities become inaccessible or too damaged to function. It is estimated by the United Nations (UN) that 80,000 women will give birth in the next three months in Ukraine – many of them without access to critical maternal health care. Devastatingly, for some, childbirth will be a life-threatening rather than a life-changing experience. 

The Spirit Of The Ukrainian People

As Ukrainian men between the ages of 18 and 60 are mandated to stay and fight, women are left to care for their children, siblings, and parents. Alone. The impacts of the hostilities are also being felt across the region, where more than 1 million people have fled, seeking refuge in neighbouring countries including Poland, the Republic of Moldova, Slovakia, Hungary and Romania in addition to other European countries. This number of people fleeing will grow over coming weeks.

We have seen images of Ukrainian women becoming soldiers and fighting, standing in production lines making molotov cocktails. This Ukrainian spirit is being admired globally, reminding us to never give-up, even when the odds seem against us. The former Miss Ukraine Anastasiia Lenna, until only a few weeks ago, was posting about flowers, bathing suits, set against city landscapes on her Instagram account. Now in one of Lenna’s recent photos, she was kitted out in goggles and khaki pants, which she hash-tagged #handsoffukraine. Images show how quickly people’s lives are changing here.

The Irony Of The Russian Federation At The UN In April 2021

Ironically the representative of the Russian Federation is quoted in a UN Security Council statement issued as recently as in April 2021, saying – “each year, delegates and other speakers come before the Council to reaffirm their commitment to ending the scourge of sexual violence in armed conflict.  Asking why, then, the many recommendations emanating from the United Nations system remain unimplemented, he said the answer too often is the hate-filled “nature of war itself”, which is sometimes stoked by outside actors.” How depressingly ironic is this statement… 

Let us not forget that last year there were already crowds of people, many who were women with children stranded between the border that separates Belarus and Poland. Or that now in Afghanistan more women and children were killed and wounded in in the first half of 2021 than in the first six months of any year since the UN began keeping count in 2009.

The Toll Of Conflict On Women

Conflict and insecurity take their toll on women’s health in several ways – from physical wounds caused by war-related injuries; vulnerability to disease aggravated by fatigue, malnutrition, and displacement; damage to the healthcare system; inaccessibility of health centres and hospitals due to insecurity; and widespread sexual violence and the attendant transmission of HIV and other diseases. Discrimination against women and cultural restrictions work against women receiving appropriate healthcare. Drawing on Afghanistan again as an example, the discrimination against women here in education means that there are few women healthcare workers, yet cultural practices dictate that injured or ill women must be treated by women.

Destruction of communities, land, resources, and infrastructure affects everyone. However, women suffer the greatest burden when, their roles in their family and community mean that they relied on the lost facilities. The impact on women’s economic and social rights – including their right to food, water, health, housing, employment, and education – can pose as much of a threat as more direct forms of violence.

Women on the move face journeys involving physical hardship and lack of shelter, food, and other necessities. In war-torn regions they are sometimes trapped in areas where no aid can reach them. And if they do reach a camp for refugees, women and girls often find that food and other resources are in short supply, and whatever is available is not distributed equitably. Also, sometimes it is the nature of modern weaponry that puts women and children, at risk. Indiscriminate weapons, including chemical, biological, and radiological weapons, lead to large-scale deaths and cause serious harm to surviving women’s reproductive health.

India CSR
Girls in masks. Coronavirus theme. Women in the city walks during quarantine. Female crossing arms. Photo: Sima Ghaffarzadeh from Pexels

In The End

I know everything makes grim reading. A key factor allowing violence against women to continue is the failure to hold those responsible to account. Ensuring justice means more than punishing perpetrators. It must include establishing the rule of law and a just social order based on concern for human security rather than military security. Once conflicts have ended, women are frequently prominent in efforts to rebuild their shattered societies.

So, once peace and order are restored in Ukraine and the country is back with its people, and Putin is removed, we need to ensure that he faces his crimes and is punished. And then we need to have a woman leading Russia, restoring peace.


About the Author

India CSR

Sangeeta Waldron is the global editor at India CSR. She is Founder of Serendipity PR & Media. Author of Corporate Social Responsibility Is Not Public Relations, published by LID Business Media.

Read more articles by Sangeeta Waldron

FKCCI
ADVERTISEMENT
Ambedkar Chamber
ADVERTISEMENT
ESG Professional Network
ADVERTISEMENT
India CSR Image 1 India CSR Image 2
Tags: Sangeeta WaldronUkraine

CSR, Sustainability, and ESG success stories hindustan zinc
ADVERTISEMENT
India CSR

India CSR

India CSR® is the largest media on CSR and sustainability offering diverse content across multisectoral issues on business responsibility. It covers Sustainable Development, Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), Sustainability, and related issues in India. Founded in 2009, the organisation aspires to become a globally admired media that offers valuable information to its readers through responsible reporting.

Related Posts

Too Much Sun, Too Little Grid Rajasthan’s Solar Irony
Articles

Too Much Sun, Too Little Grid: Rajasthan’s Solar Irony

6 hours ago
Rethinking Materialism in the Current Era
Articles

Rethinking Materialism in the Current Era

5 days ago
Priming the CSR Tap for Biodiversity
Articles

Priming the CSR Tap for Biodiversity

1 week ago
Mining CSR Must Sync with National Priorities for Sustainability, say Experts
Corporate Social Responsibility

Mining CSR Must Sync with National Priorities for Sustainability, say Experts

2 weeks ago
STEM Education
Corporate Social Responsibility

CSR Led STEM Education for India’s Rural Schools

2 weeks ago
Dr Bhaskar Chatterjee
Articles

Dr. Bhaskar Chatterjee: Architect of CSR and Sustainability in India

4 weeks ago
Load More
BBA - CSR, Sustainability and ESG, Rungta International Skills University Bhilai
ADVERTISEMENT
FKCCI
ADVERTISEMENT

Interviews

Indu Mehta
Interviews

ESG in India Has Moved Beyond Storytelling: LNJ Bhilwara’s Indu Mehta on Sustainability as an Operating Discipline

by India CSR
May 30, 2026

Indu Mehta of LNJ Bhilwara Group shares insights on ESG regulations, decarbonisation and sustainability leadership.

Read moreDetails
Sourabh Lohtia, Chief Marketing & Communications Officer, PNB MetLife

Targeted Skilling Can Build Confident Futures for Underprivileged Women: Sourabh Lohtia, PNB MetLife

May 29, 2026
Shashi Shetty: SKF India’s UDAAN Scholarship Helps Rural Girls and Divyaang Students Build Careers

Shashi Shetty: SKF India’s UDAAN Scholarship Helps Rural Girls and Divyaang Students Build Careers

May 28, 2026
R. Pavithra Kumar, CEO, JSW Foundation

Redefining CSR and Driving Sustainable Social Impact: An Interview with R. Pavithra Kumar of JSW Foundation

April 16, 2026
Load More
Ad 1 Ad 2 Ad 3
ADVERTISEMENT

CSR UPDATES

Sula Vineyards CSR Spending Report 2025-26

CSR in Gujarat: 80 Bird Species Return: Tata Chemicals’ Mithapur Restoration Shows Power of Local Action

CSR: Malabar Group Hunger Free World Initiative Turns Daily Meals into Pathways for Dignity and Rehabilitation

ICICI Lombard CSR Spending Report Rs 51.67 Crore for FY2025-26, Reaching Over 10 Lakh Lives

Reliance Industries CSR 2025-26: Key NGOs and Institutions Receive Major Share of Rs. 1,223 Cr CSR Funds

Goodera AI to Advance AI-Driven Social Impact

STEM Learning STEM Learning STEM Learning
ADVERTISEMENT
Facebook Twitter Youtube LinkedIn Instagram
India CSR Logo

India CSR is the largest tech-led platform for information on CSR and sustainability in India offering diverse content across multisectoral issues. It covers Sustainable Development, Corporate Social Responsibility (CSR), Sustainability, and related issues in India. Founded in 2009, the organisation aspires to become a globally admired media that offers valuable information to its readers through responsible reporting. To enjoy the premium services, we invite you to partner with us.

Follow us on social media:

Subscribe to Our Newsletter

Don't miss out on the latest updates in corporate social responsibility. Subscribe to our newsletter at indiacsr.in and be part of the positive change.
Please enable JavaScript in your browser to complete this form.
Loading

  • About India CSR
  • Team
  • India CSR Awards 2026
  • India CSR Leadership Summit
  • Partnership
  • Guest Posts
  • Services
  • ESG Professional Network
  • Content Writing Services
  • Business Information
  • Contact
  • Privacy Policy
  • Terms of Use
  • Donate

Copyright © 2026 - India CSR | All Rights Reserved

No Result
View All Result
  • Home
  • Corporate Social Responsibility
    • Art & Culture
    • CSR Leaders
    • Child Rights
    • Culture
    • Education
    • Gender Equality
    • Around the World
    • Skill Development
    • Safety
    • Covid-19
    • Safe Food For All
  • Sustainability
    • Sustainability Dialogues
    • Sustainability Knowledge Series
    • Plastics
    • Sustainable Development Goals
    • ESG
    • Circular Economy
    • BRSR
  • Corporate Governance
    • Diversity & Inclusion
  • Interviews
  • SDGs
    • No Poverty
    • Zero Hunger
    • Good Health & Well-Being
    • Quality Education
    • Gender Equality
    • Clean Water & Sanitation – SDG 6
    • Affordable & Clean Energy
    • Decent Work & Economic Growth
    • Industry, Innovation & Infrastructure
    • Reduced Inequalities
    • Sustainable Cities & Communities
    • Responsible Consumption & Production
    • Climate Action
    • Life Below Water
    • Life on Land
    • Peace, Justice & Strong Institutions
    • Partnerships for the Goals
  • Articles
  • Events
  • हिंदी
  • More
    • Business
    • Finance
    • Environment
    • Economy
    • Health
    • Around the World
    • Social Sector Leaders
    • Social Entrepreneurship
    • Trending News
      • Important Days
      • Great People
      • Product Review
      • International
      • Sports
      • Entertainment
    • Case Studies
    • Philanthropy
    • Biography
    • Technology
    • Lifestyle
    • Sports
    • Gaming
    • Knowledge
    • Home Improvement
    • Words Power
    • Chief Ministers

Copyright © 2026 - India CSR | All Rights Reserved

This website uses cookies. By continuing to use this website you are giving consent to cookies being used. Visit our Privacy and Cookie Policy.