Violence against women decried by students in Manila

With purple ribbons on their wrists, more than 3,000 students, teachers and nuns from the Catholic-run St. Scholastica's College in Manila, flash the No.1 sign as they dance at their quadrangle to take part in the global campaign to end violence against women and girls dubbed One Billion Rising Friday, Feb. 13, 2015 in Manila, Philippines. AP/Bullit Marquez

MANILA, Philippines — Around 4,000 mostly female students from a Roman Catholic school in Manila stomped their feet and raised their hands Friday as they danced to call for an end to violence against women and girls.

The gathering — which included students ranging from kindergarteners to master's degree candidates, and about a dozen nuns — was part of a global campaign called One Billion Rising.

Filipino actress Monique Wilson, a director of the movement that was started three years ago, said U.N. statistics show one in three women — or 1 billion — will be raped or beaten in her lifetime.

"Violence against women and children has escalated and worsened — domestic violence, sexual assault, trafficking, cyber pornography, kidnapping — that there is hardly space for women and children," the school said in a statement, noting that hundreds of Nigerian schoolgirls kidnapped last year by Islamic militants remain missing.

Sister Mary Francis Dizon, the school's president, danced wearing a pink "One Billion Rising" shirt over her white nun's frock. "We rise, revolt and dance to a future when there is no more violence, when social structures and relationships protect and support the vulnerable, and when women and children are safe, secure and empowered," she said.

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