At least 245 million women around the world have been widowed and more than 115 million of them live in devastating poverty, according to a new study launched Tuesday night by Cherie Blair, wife of the former British prime minister. The most dire consequences are faced by 2 million Afghan widows and at least 740,000 Iraqi widows who lost their husbands as a result of the ongoing conflicts; by widows and their children evicted from their family homes in sub-Saharan Africa; by elderly widows caring for grandchildren orphaned by the HIV/AIDS crisis, and by child widows aged 7 to 17 in developing countries, the report said. «Across the world, widows suffer dreadful discrimination and abuse,» Blair said. «In too many cases they're pushed to the very margins of society, trapped in poverty and left vulnerable to abuse and exploitation.» Blair was in New York to launch the report entitled «Invisible Forgotten Sufferers: The Plight of Widows around the World,» commissioned by the Loomba Foundation which works in a dozen countries to help widows and educate their children. «The plight of widows _ in the shadows of the world _ is a human rights catastrophe,» said Blair, the foundation's president. «It's really a hidden humanitarian crisis,» she was quoted as saying by the Associated Press.