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A move to change …
building on principles of SC Resolution 1325
Australian National Committee on Refugee Women (ANCORW), African
Women’s Advocacy Unit
Overview
This article will focus on actions taken by a small group of refugee
women from African countries to begin to address issues of displacement
in resettlement and bring about policy change and better support
for refugee women who have resettled to Australia.
Background
Despite the enormous efforts made by UNHCR, Governments, non-government
organizations, the media and civil society groups around the world
many people still don’t fully understand or recognize the
extent to which a person’s life is affected by being in a
refugee or internally displaced situation.
Forced displacement from home and all that is familiar, loss of
economic and social status, loss and separation from loved ones,
in some cases extreme deprivation, living in poverty, unsanitary
conditions, lack of access to health services, harassment and torture
can impact severely on resettlement to a safe third country. For
women, rape, sexual violence and harassment are commonplace before
and during flight, and in refugee camp situations.
It is acknowledged that resettlement to a new country is challenging
for all refugees. However, for refugee women, their situation is
often compounded by the impact of displacement, resettlement and
rebuilding family and community while still dealing with the mental,
physical, psychological and emotional impacts of the refugee experience
as outlined above.
A high amount of stress is placed on newly arrived refugee and humanitarian
families from the African region. Difficulties with finding adequate
housing and employment , limited English language skills, cultural
differences along with financial pressures creates barriers to resettlement.
Resulting hardship, lack of understanding around child protection
issues and other legal mechanisms exacerbates fear, impacts on feelings
of safety and security and leads many women into social isolation.
Many African women and men, girls and boys are dealing with changing
roles, responsibilities, obligations and identities. The intensity
of being torn between two cultures, compounded by the changes in
family structures experienced in flight and the refugee camps can
cause family and intergenerational conflict and may result in family
breakdown.
A move to change … building on principles of SC 1325
“We have a right to be here, and we have a right to have
our voice heard – a woman’s voice”
“[Security Council Resolution] 1325 was there when we were
in the camps – but we didn’t know about it. How could
we use it?
"We were invisible. A woman’s voice is never heard
– there is no protection in the camps”.(quotes
by AWAU trainees in a presentation to DIAC)
For the last four years, Australia has been actively resettling
refugees from African countries (in 2005 – 2006 period, 49%
of all humanitarian entrants to Australia were from African countries).
In 2005, the Australian National Committee on Refugee Women (ANCORW),
a national advocacy and advisory organization based in Sydney, Australia
was approached by one of its board members to seek funding to work
with refugee women from Africa to begin to further identify and
address some of the issues impacting on their successful resettlement
in Sydney, Australia.
Funding was sought from the Department of Immigration and Citizenship
(DIAC) to run a small pilot program for a group of 15 refugee women
from various countries in Africa. Women were trained in how to work
within a human rights framework, incorporating a gender perspective
to resettlement, representation and advocacy skills. The ANCORW
board and DIAC worked with the graduates of the training to make
links and networks into the agencies and services in order to further
progress the issues identified by their communities and to begin
to influence policy and service provision to bring about change
in their situation. From this training the ANCORW African Women’s
Advocacy Unit (AWAU) was born.
AWAU is an organization run for and by refugee women from African
countries to advocate and lobby for issues of refugee women locally,
nationally and internationally.
Since it’s conception and the initial training of 15 refugee
women from Sierra Leone, Burundi, Rwanda, Sudan, Uganda and Liberia,
AWAU has successfully identified key issues for their communities
and began negotiation with various government departments and national
agencies to bring about more insight into the issues for refugee
women in resettlement and to offer more ‘durable solutions’
to these issues. In 2006 the graduates were trained in training
methodologies to pass on their skills to a new group of refugee
women from African countries. A new group of 35 refugee women from
African countries have now actively joined AWAU and are working
towards building the refugee women’s voice in resettlement.
While this is a success story, with potential to reach out to refugee
women from other countries, the author of this piece returns to
the question so eloquently posed by one of the participants in the
training. “How are women in refugee and displaced situations
to know about Security Council Resolution 1325, and how can this
resolution to used to addresses the impacts of war on women in resettlement.”
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