Women and girls living through humanitarian crises are at risk of being overlooked – just as they are at their most vulnerable.
The UN’s reproductive health agency, UNFPA, has been working to assess the impact of recent steep funding cuts, warning that from the Democratic Republic of Congo to Haiti, Sudan and beyond, a lack of funding for reproductive care or treatment to tackle gender-based violence, is causing untold suffering.
Millions of them are already experiencing the horrors of war, climate change and natural disasters.
Facing a dark future
As support becomes increasingly scarce, women and girls are being overlooked in their hour of greatest need, the agency argues in a new campaign to shed light on their plight – Don’t Let the Lights Go Out.
UNFPA’s humanitarian response plans were already under 30 per cent funded in 2024, before this year’s severe cuts began taking effect.
The funding situation on the ground is predicted to get worse, which means a shortage of midwives; a lack of medicines and equipment to handle childbirth complications; shuttered safe spaces; less healthcare overall and cuts to counselling or legal services for survivors of gender-based violence.
The United States has announced cuts of approximately $330 million to UNFPA worldwide, which according to the agency will significantly undermine efforts to prevent maternal deaths.
The agency recently warned on the devastating impacts that the massive cuts will have in Afghanistan, one of the world’s worst humanitarian crises.
Sounding the alarm
The need for health and protection services is highest in crisis zones: 70 per cent of women there are subjected to gender-based violence – double the rate in non-crisis settings.
Furthermore, around 60 per cent of preventable maternal deaths occur in crisis-hit countries.
Through the Don’t Let the Lights Go Out campaign, the UN aims to shine a light on the needs of women and girls in crisis, raise funds to support them, and to reaffirm that women’s health, safety and rights must remain non-negotiable priorities in any humanitarian response.

© UNICEF/Azizullah Karimi
Gaza’s most vulnerable
In Gaza, with food and essential medicines critically low, pregnant women, breastfeeding mothers and children in general are being severely impacted.
Reports show that one in every five people is now facing starvation. For an estimated 55,000 pregnant women, each missed meal increases the risk of miscarriages, stillbirths and undernourished newborns.
According to a doctor at Al-Awda Hospital who spoke to the UN agency, there’s been “a significant increase in cases of low birthweight babies, directly linked to maternal malnutrition and anaemia during pregnancy.”
Health system on its knees
Relentless attacks on hospitals, health facilities and medical staff have left the healthcare system in ruins.
Amid these dire conditions, almost 11,000 pregnant women are already reported to be at risk of famine, and nearly 17,000 pregnant and breastfeeding women will need urgent treatment for acute malnutrition over the coming months. For many, the fallout is devastating.
In 2025, UNFPA is seeking $99 million to address the ongoing and emerging needs in Palestine, but as of April, just $12.5 million has been received.
Where next?
Latest news
Read the latest news stories:
- Malnutrition Plagues Children and Pregnant Women in Afghanistan Tuesday, May 20, 2025
- Fostering Dialogue for Disarmament Ahead of Non-Proliferation of Nuclear Weapons Review Conference Tuesday, May 20, 2025
- Explainer: How Germs Outsmart Antimicrobials and Why Its Making Us Sicker Tuesday, May 20, 2025
- ‘Silence is complicity,’ warns activist who fled DPR Korea Tuesday, May 20, 2025
- UN life-saving aid allowed to trickle into Gaza as needs mount Tuesday, May 20, 2025
- ‘Keep the lights on’ for women and girls caught up in crisis Tuesday, May 20, 2025
- 90 days to economic collapse: UN and experts sound alarm over security at sea Tuesday, May 20, 2025
- AI threatens one in four jobs – but transformation, not replacement, is the real risk Tuesday, May 20, 2025
- Afghanistan’s returnees at a crossroads between collapse and recovery Tuesday, May 20, 2025
- Organized crime groups increasingly embedded in gold supply chain Tuesday, May 20, 2025
Link to this page from your site/blog
Add the following HTML code to your page:
<p><a href="https://www.globalissues.org/news/2025/05/20/39912">‘Keep the lights on’ for women and girls caught up in crisis</a>, <cite>Inter Press Service</cite>, Tuesday, May 20, 2025 (posted by Global Issues)</p>… to produce this:
‘Keep the lights on’ for women and girls caught up in crisis, Inter Press Service, Tuesday, May 20, 2025 (posted by Global Issues)