Close Menu
21stNews21stNews

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    What's Hot

    Pep Guardiola Hits Out at World Cup 2026 Prices: ‘Football Is for the Fans’

    April 25, 2026

    World Cup Final Tickets Hit $2.3M On FIFA’s Own Resale Platform

    April 25, 2026

    Morocco Launches Central Unit to Support Women Victims of Violence

    April 25, 2026
    Facebook X (Twitter) Instagram
    • About Us
    • Contact Us
    • Privacy Policy
    • Terms and Conditions
    Pinterest Facebook LinkedIn
    21stNews21stNews
    • Home
    • Moroccan News
    • Industry & Technologies
    • Financial News
    • Sports
    Subscribe
    21stNews21stNews
    Home»Financial News»Sexual Violence Awareness Month Amid Epstein Fallout, AI, and Apathy
    Financial News

    Sexual Violence Awareness Month Amid Epstein Fallout, AI, and Apathy

    By April 24, 20264 Mins Read
    Share Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Reddit Telegram Email
    Share
    Facebook Twitter LinkedIn Pinterest Email

    Rabat – As Sexual Violence Awareness Month comes to a close, the global conversation reveals the evolving and pervasive reach of sexual violence.

    From the ongoing fallout of the Epstein case to the rapid rise of artificial intelligence, the mechanisms of sexual exploitation are advancing faster than the systems meant to confront them. 

    At least 840 million women  – roughly one in three – have experienced partner or sexual violence in their lifetime, with little improvement since 2000. In 2025 alone, an estimated 316 million women faced physical or sexual violence from an intimate partner. 

    Despite advocacy efforts, intimate partner violence has only fallen 0.2% annually for the past two decades. 

    Digital violence expands abuse

    At the same time, technological advancements are introducing new forms of harm. The rise of accessible AI tools has dramatically lowered the barrier to creating realistic, non-consensual sexual imagery. What once required technical expertise can now be done with minimal effort, enabling abuse at an unprecedented scale.

    From 2019-2023, there was a 550% increase in deepfake videos. In 2023, 98% of all deepfake videos were pornographic, and 99% depicted women. In 2025, researchers identified more than 8,000 AI-generated images and videos depicting realistic child sexual abuse, both on the dark web and on mainstream platforms.

    This metamorphic element of the sexual violence compounds with already sweeping digital violence.

    In Arab countries, these threats are exacerbated by social stigma and limited reporting. Around 44% of women report repeated exposure to online violence, yet many are discouraged from speaking out. Victim-blaming remains prominent, with 36% of women being told to ignore the online harassment, 23% blamed for it, and 12% subjected to physical violence from family. 

    Women activists and human rights defenders face even higher rates of digital attacks, with 70% feeling unsafe from sexual harassment and the same percentage having received unwanted sexual content, while 58% reporting inappropriate phone calls and unwelcome communications.

    Legal gaps and rapidly evolving tech landscape

    Legal frameworks have begun to recognize these challenges. Regional agreements such as the Arab Declaration on Combating Violence Against Women and the African Union’s 2025 convention formally acknowledge digital violence as a form of gender-based harm.

    Morocco took steps in 2018 to criminalize the non-consensual distribution of intimate content, with penalties of up to three years in prison. 

    Still, enforcement remains uneven and international legal systems are struggling to keep up with the rapidly evolving AI and digital abuse. 

    Fewer than 40% of countries have legal frameworks around digital violence. In Sub-Saharan Africa, only 25% offer legal protections. 

    While sexually abusive content is allowed to run rampant online, the consequences are already mushrooming. Research in South Africa found that exposure to harmful content witnessed men being 2.6 times more likely to perpetrate violence and 1.8 times more likely to believe misogynistic views.

    Questionable coverage and global apathy

    Despite the internationally high-profile Epstein case and the growing use of AI to create sexually explicit images using real people’s likeness, reporting on violence against women and girls is at a “pitiful” low, according to a new report.

    The study analyzed 1.14 billion global news stories and found significant deficits in reporting around misogynistic harassment and violence against women, hitting a decade low in 2025 with 1.3% of all online news output.  

    It also analyzed the prevalence of key language in reportage. The term “violence against women” appeared in a bare 0.1% of the nearly 1 million articles related to Epstein – this contrasts a 25% prevalence for the term “victims” and 26% for “power,” “money,” “elites” or “corruption.”

    The expanding list of powerful individuals connected to the disgraced financier’s sex-trafficking ring elucidates an inescapable global web of sexual exploitation and violence against girls and women.

    Yet, the questionable reportage angle and broader handling of the Epstein case as a purely scandalous issue rather than a systemic issue aligns with a looming sense of apathy regarding unchecked sexual violence. 

    “The ‘Epstein Files’, which are suggestive of the existence of a global criminal enterprise have shocked the conscience of humanity and raised terrifying implications of the level of impunity for such crimes,” experts from the United Nations Human Rights Council said in a press release highlighting the mishandling of the files.

    The challenge is no longer simply raising awareness, but confronting the systems that allow abuse to thrive. Without sustained attention and accountability, the gap between awareness and action risks becoming yet another form of silence.

    Share. Facebook Twitter Pinterest LinkedIn Tumblr Email
    Previous ArticleOne Year After Launch, What Has ONCF Delivered on Its High-Speed Rail Program?
    Next Article Morocco Opens Probe Into Indian Ceramic Tile Imports Over Dumping Concerns

    Related Posts

    Financial News

    Pep Guardiola Hits Out at World Cup 2026 Prices: ‘Football Is for the Fans’

    April 25, 2026
    Financial News

    Morocco Opens Probe Into Indian Ceramic Tile Imports Over Dumping Concerns

    April 24, 2026
    Financial News

    Senegal Statement Revives Confusion Over ‘Memorable Victory’

    April 24, 2026
    Top Posts

    How Google Gemini Helps Crypto Traders Filter Signals From Noise

    August 8, 202524 Views

    DeFi Soars with Tokenized Stocks, But User Activity Shifts to NFTs

    August 9, 202522 Views

    DC facing $20 million security funding cut despite Trump complaints of US capital crime

    August 8, 202521 Views
    News Categories
    • AgriFood (196)
    • Financial News (1,872)
    • Industry & Technologies (1,635)
    • Moroccan News (1,933)
    • Sports (1,314)
    Most Popular

    El Salvador Friendly in Doubt as Morocco Propose Venu Change

    April 23, 20263 Views

    ODCO Makes First Appearance at SIAM in Support of Agricultural Cooperatives

    April 22, 20263 Views

    A Calm Capital • BEWILDERED IN MOROCCO

    April 20, 20263 Views
    Our Picks

    Asaduddin Owaisi slams Centre over H-1B visa fee hike, says ‘no complaint against Trump, my quarrel is with…’

    September 20, 2025

    Bitcoin Bulls Halted by $107,000 in New BTC Price Battle

    November 11, 2025

    Casablanca First International Coating and Finishing Trade Fair

    January 29, 2026

    Subscribe to Updates

    Get the latest creative news from FooBar about art, design and business.

    • Home
    • About Us
    • Privacy Policy
    © 2026 21stNews. All rights reserved.

    Type above and press Enter to search. Press Esc to cancel.

    Go to mobile version