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Key findings
  • Three in 10 Mauritanians (31%) say violence against women and girls is common in their community.
  • More than two-thirds (68%) of citizens say a man is “never justified” in using physical force to discipline his wife, while 31% consider it “sometimes” or “always” justified.
  • Two-thirds (66%) of Mauritanians believe that domestic violence should be handled as a private matter to be resolved within the family rather than a criminal issue.
  • More than half (52%) of respondents say it is “somewhat likely” or “very likely” that a woman will be criticised, harassed, or shamed by others in the community if she reports GBV to the authorities. o But a strong majority (77%) believe that the police are likely to take cases of GBV seriously.

The 2021/2022 Women, Peace and Security Index ranks Mauritania 157th out of 170 countries  – 13th worst in the world – in women’s status and empowerment (Georgetown Institute for  Women, Peace and Security, 2021). One important reason is widespread gender-based  violence enabled by societal taboos and a weak system of legal protections and  enforcement (U.S. Department of State, 2023; United Nations General Assembly, 2024). 

Amid powerful stigma surrounding gender-based violence (GBV), reliable data on its  prevalence are scarce. The U.S. Department of State (2023) highlights “credible reports of …  extensive gender-based violence, including domestic or intimate partner violence, sexual  violence, female genital mutilation/cutting, and other forms of such violence.” After a 12-day  visit, the United Nations Working Group on Discrimination Against Women and Girls reported  “outrageous accounts of gender-based violence, in the family and the community, including  a high prevalence of rape against young girls” (United Nations Office of the High  Commissioner for Human Rights, 2023). The Mauritanian Parliament has rejected a draft law  addressing GBV in 2018, 2021, and 2023 (Mechergui, 2024). 

The government has outlawed female genital mutilation (FGM), but enforcement is almost  non-existent and its prevalence remains high (United Nations, 2023): According to a report  by the Orchid Project (2023), almost two-thirds of Mauritanian women aged 15-49 have  undergone FGM. Another harmful practice, forced feeding of young women being  prepared for marriage, persists mainly in rural areas (Ouldzeidoune, Keating, Bertrand, & Rice,  2013; United Nations, 2023). 

This dispatch reports on a special survey module included in the Afrobarometer Round 9  (2021/2023) survey to explore Africans’ perceptions of gender-based violence.  

In Mauritania, most citizens say that GBV is not a common occurrence in their community and that a man is never justified in using physical force to discipline his wife. But a majority  also consider domestic violence against women a private matter to be resolved within the  family rather than a criminal issue requiring the involvement of law enforcement. 

While most Mauritanians think the police take reported cases of GBV seriously, more than half  say a woman is likely to be criticised, harassed, or shamed if she reports such violence to the  authorities.

Baba Adou

Baba Adou is a researcher of Political Science at the University of Florida and the UF Sahel Research Group