New Study Flags Alarming Rise in Tech-driven Gender-based Violence

A new study has raised warnings of an alarming surge of Technology-Facilitated Gender-Based Violence (TFGBV).

The study conducted by the pan-African organisation, Paradigm Initiative (PIN), shows 67 per cent of respondents being victims of at least one or multiple forms of digital violence.

It was released on Wednesday, December 10, as the world marked International Human Rights Day.

It exposes deep systemic failures, weak accountability, and unsafe online spaces, driving a rapidly escalating epidemic across Cameroon, Kenya, Nigeria, Senegal, Zambia, and Zimbabwe.

In a statement on Thursday, PIN said it recognises that this gap limits both the understanding of TFGBV and the development of effective solutions.

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In response, it adopts a survivor-centred approach that reframes how TFGBV is researched, discussed, and addressed.

By prioritising survivors’ perspectives, the research uncovers the emotional, social, and systemic dimensions of digital violence that formal reports and statistics often obscure.

It also interrogates how survivors navigate reporting systems, access justice, and play an informed role in digital spaces that are frequently hostile or unsafe.

A key finding of the study is that young people are disproportionately affected, with those aged 18–34 constituting the vast majority of survivors.

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Most incidents of TFGBV occurred on Facebook, WhatsApp, and X (formerly Twitter), underscoring how mainstream social media platforms continue to function as structurally unsafe spaces for many users—particularly women, activists, and advocates.

“Victims’ experiences range from sexual harassment, threats, and misogynistic attacks to severe violations such as stalking, non-consensual image sharing, hacking, sextortion, and identity-based harassment.

“Personal testimonies reveal profound emotional, psychological, and reputational harm,” the study states.

It also highlights that formal systems such as the police, employers, and public institutions remain underutilised, largely due to fear, mistrust, or an expectation of inaction.

While the findings expose wide-ranging gaps across platforms, institutions, and legal frameworks, they also highlight survivors’ resilience and their continued efforts to seek safer digital environments.

In light of these findings, PIN calls for urgent action to make online spaces safer for everyone, in line with this year’s Human Rights Day theme, “Human Rights, our everyday essentials.”

The digital advocacy organisation added that addressing these systemic gaps is critical to advancing democratic engagement, promoting media pluralism, fostering digital inclusion, and achieving gender equality across Africa.

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Alex is a business journalist cum data enthusiast with the Pinnacle Daily. He can be reached via ealex@thepinnacleng.com, @ehime_alex on X

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