Speaking at the event, organised by the Centre for Women's Studies, the centre's executive director, Rada Boric, said that this year's topic of the global campaign were women who were marginalised in more than one way - for being women, for being members of a minority or for having a disability.
"It is important not to forget that many women who live in the prison system are stigmatised more than male prisoners; it is also important to talk about women's precarious work, about women who are underpaid or are sexually harassed at work, and about women refugees on the way to the safe Europe," she said.
Speaking of women with disabilities, Gender Equality Ombudswoman Visnja Ljubicic said that those women were discriminated against on a daily basis because they were women, because they had a disability and because they were unemployed or insufficiently educated.
Ljubicic called on state institutions to promptly and efficiently act on preventing violence, protecting victims and punishing perpetrators, and on all individuals "to not lose solidarity, empathy and civil courage in fighting and reporting violence."
Addressing those gathered at the event, the Special UN Rapporteur on violence against women, Dubravka Simonovic, said that Croatia was faced with challenges, which she said primarily concerned the ratification of the Council of Europe Convention on preventing and combating violence against women and domestic violence.
Ramiza Memedi of the Better Future association said that Roma women were in a particularly vulnerable position because they were discriminated against at many levels in their community and beyond. "Apart from partner violence and domestic violence, they are also faced with structural violence on the labour market," she said.
The campaign "One Billion Rising" was launched on Valentine's Day in 2012 to raise awareness of unsettling statistics that show that one in three women globally will be raped or physically abused during their lifetime, which makes one billion women and girls.
There are no unified data in Europe on the frequency of violence against women but many EU member-countries conduct surveys whose analysis shows that in all the countries one in four or five women has experienced physical violence at least once in their adulthood, and that one in ten has experienced sexual violence. Croatia is not an exception - in January this year alone, four women were killed by their partners.
In the four years since its launching the One Billion Rising campaign has turned into the biggest ever organised campaign designed to combat violence against women. Every February, until March 8, International Women's Day, it is joined by thousands of local drives globally. In 2016 the global campaign is marked in more than 200 countries and in Croatia some ten cities have joined it.
The Croatian campaign is organised by the Centre for Women's Studies in cooperation with a number of civil society organisations and the Social Democratic Party Women's Forum from Zagreb.