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1325
PeaceWomen E-News
Issue #51
10 December 2004
OCTOBER 2004: RECAP &
FOLLOW-UP
The
Security Council unanimously adopted Resolution 1325 on women, peace
and security, 31 October 2000. CLICK
HERE for the full text of the resolution.
To receive the 1325 PeaceWomen E-Newsletter, send an email to 1325news@peacewomen.org
with "subscribe" as the subject heading.
For past issues of the newsletter, CLICK
HERE.
THIS ISSUE OF 1325 PEACEWOMEN E-NEWS FEATURES:
1. 1325 on Trial in Northern Ireland
2. October 2004:
Recap & Follow-up
3. 1325 Translation Update:
11 New Translations Available
4. Women, Peace and Security News
5. Little Gender Perspective Found in
New UN Report on Threats, Challenges and Change
(PeaceWomen)
6. Feature Resource:
Inclusive Security, Sustainable Peace: A Toolkit for Advocacy and
Action (International Alert’s Gender and Peacebuilding Programme
and Women Waging Peace)
7. Feature Statements:
A Sampling of Recent Letters, Questions & Interventions
8. Feature Events:
Highlighting Recent Events
9. Feature Publications:
“Gender And Small Arms: Moving Into The Mainstream,”
new publications by Women Waging Peace, Amnesty International, INSTRAW,
& Others
10. Women, Peace and Security Calendar
If you would like to fill out the 1325 PeaceWomen
E-News evaluation form in either English or French, please write
to 1325news@peacewomen.org and we will send you the questionnaire
by email.
The PeaceWomen is a project of the Women's International League
for Peace and Freedom. Please visit us at http://www.peacewomen.org.
Due to the winter holidays, this is the last
issue of 1325 PeaceWomen E-News before the New Year. The next issue
will be circulated in early January 2005.
1.
1325 on Trial in Northern Ireland
PeaceWomen
Project, December 2004 |
On 17 November 2004, the PeaceWomen Project participated
in a mock “Trial of UN Security Council Resolution 1325 -
Women, Peace and Security” hosted by the Northern Ireland
Women’s European Platform (NIWEP) at Stormont, Northern Ireland’s
Parliament Buildings, located in Belfast. The mock trial event was
modeled on the “1325 on Trial” event organized by the
UK Women’s National Commission for the 48th Session of the
Commission on the Status of Women (2004) in New York City.
Presiding over the mock trial was Bronagh Hinds, founding member
of the Northern Ireland Women's Coalition, Convening the Trial,
the judge presented the following question to the jury:
“Has the UK government, the Northern Ireland Executive, the
Assembly when in being and Northern Ireland’s political parties,
demonstrated sufficient commitment to the implementation of Resolution
1325 in Northern Ireland, and in particular to those elements of
the resolution that have been highlighted today?”
The jury heard from three witnesses who each provided testimony
on a specific issue: non-departmental public bodies (NDPBs); police;
and the formal peace process and Northern Ireland Assembly. Following
the witness testimonies, the two representatives of the PeaceWomen
Project, serving as the prosecution and defense, questioned each
of the witnesses further.
Upon hearing the witness testimonies and closing statements by the
barristers, the audience - serving as the mock jury - comprised
of elected and appointed officials and representatives of civil
society organizations, unanimously declared that commitment to the
implementation of Resolution 1325 has not been sufficiently demonstrated.
NIWEP will release an outcome document on the event in the coming
weeks. For more information about the event email NIWEP at: niwep@btconnect.com.
Another recent women, peace and security event in Northern Ireland:
Lecture: Christine Chinkin on Peace Processes, Post Conflict Security
and Guarantees of Women's Rights: the International Context Considered
1 December 2004, Queen's University, Belfast,
Northern Ireland
This lecture was the ninth Torkel Opsahl Memorial Lecture, hosted
this year by Democratic Dialogue, the School of Politics and International
Studies and the Centre for the Advancement of Women in Politics
at Queen's University, Belfast. Christine Chinkin, professor of
international law at the London School of Economics, prepared a
background paper for and facilitated the UN Expert Group Meeting
on peace agreements as a means to promote gender equality last November
(2003). For information about this event, contact Margaret Ward
at margaret@democraticdialogue.org.
Today’s women, peace and security event in Northern Ireland:
Women’s Participation and Leadership in Global Processes
- Acting Locally for Global Change
10 December 2004, Belfast, Nothern Ireland
Women into Politics will mark International Human Rights Day with
a conference on Globalisation and the challenges for women's participation
and leadership. This conference is a summit following a series of
workshops on Globalisation and its impact on women's lives - locally
and globally. The day is dedicated to Aung San Suu Kyi, the Burmese
pro-democracy leader and Nobel Peace Prize Winner. The conference
will be an opportunity to analyse the diverse forms of globalisation
in local, regional, and global arenas, its impacts on communities
and on women’s right to participate at all levels of society,
and women’s efforts to contest global power relationships
and opportunities for global solidarity. For more information contact:
info@womenintopolitics.org
For PeaceWomen’s Northern Ireland Resources Index, CLICK
HERE.
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2.
OCTOBER 2004: RECAP & FOLLOW-UP |
• Security Council Open Debate
on Women, Peace and Security
28 October 2004
All 15 Security Council Members, 27 Member States, 5 UN entities,
and 1 civil society representative made interventions during the
Open Debate. Of the 27 Member State statements 2 were made on behalf
of country groups (EU and Human Security Network). The Open Debate
concluded with a Statement read by the UK as President of the Security
Council for the month of October.
Some highlights of the debate:
A Security Council Monitoring Mechanism
A number of Security Council Members and Member States referred
to the establishment of a monitoring mechanism to be housed in the
Security Council to ensure the Council’s systematic implementation
of 1325. While the majority of language used by Member States to
discuss this idea was vague, 4 Member States referred explicitly
to the establishment of a 'focal point' (Liechtenstein, Netherlands
on behalf of the EU, New Zealand and Sweden), and Sweden referred
explicitly to the establishment of a working group to “supplement”
such a focal point. However, no such similar language is found in
either the Secretary-General’s report, or the Security Council
Presidential Statement.
This is not the first time Security Council Members have discussed
establishing a mechanism within the Council to monitor implementation
of 1325. In fact, the idea was first raised by the UK and a number
of other Member States at the October 2002 Open Debate, and then
reiterated at last year’s Open Debate not only by the UK but
also by Chile and Liechtenstein. In addition, Council Members discussed
such a mechanism during the first Security Council Working Roundtable,
co-sponsored by the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security,
and the Permanent Missions to the UN of Canada, Chile and the United
Kingdom, held in January 2004 (see http://www.peacewomen.org/un/ngo/events.html#Roundtable1).
A UN System-Wide Action Plan on 1325
In his report on Women, Peace and Security (13 October 2004), the
Secretary-General announced his intention to “develop a comprehensive
system-wide strategy and action plan for increasing attention to
gender perspectives in conflict prevention with
particular emphasis on monitoring and reporting mechanisms.”
He also announced his intention to “develop a comprehensive
strategy and action plan for mainstreaming gender perspectives into
peacekeeping activities at Headquarters and in
peacekeeping operations, in particular…”
While the Presidential Statement, issued at the end of the debate,
included verbal support for the Secretary-General’s intention
to develop these two action plans, it specifically requested the
Secretary-General to submit to the Council in October 2005 “an
action plan, with time lines, for implementing resolution 1325 (2000)
across the UN system…”
While the Office of the Special Adviser on Gender issues and Advancement
of Women (OSAGI), in collaboration with the Inter-Agency Taskforce
on Women, Peace and Security (Inter-Agency Taskforce), has taken
the lead in synthesizing the initial process and framework for the
UN action plan, it remains to be seen which UN entity/entities will
be in charge of the development of, and monitoring and reporting
on, the action plan.
Civil society groups have put forward recommendations on accountability
and process regarding the development of, and monitoring and reporting
on, the UN action plan. For example, Kvinna till Kvinna, in a set
of recommendations produced at an October 2004 seminar, has proposed
that the Executive Committee on Peace and Security (ECPS), the senior
management group on peace and security issues within the UN, “should
be designated as the appropriate authority within the UN system
to oversee a coordinated system-wide implementation plan….”
Further, the Kvinna till Kvinna document proposes that the Inter-Agency
Taskforce “should be mandated by the ECPS to undertake specific
tasks, in particular to coordinate reporting to the ECPS from the
UN’s Funds, Agencies and Departments on progress made on ways
and means, obstacles and achievements in implementation.”
In addition, the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security
has developed a document outlining its ideas for the UN system-wide
action plan. The Working Group will share its recommendations with
OSAGI and the Inter-Agency Taskforce shortly, as well as with other
interested parties.
We will monitor the discussions on, and plans for, this UN system-wide
action plan, and share information in upcoming issues of the Newsletter
as it becomes available.
For the full text of recommendations from the Kvinna till Kvinna
seminar, CLICK
HERE.
For more information about the seminar and Kvinna till Kvinna Foundation
visit: http://www.iktk.se
National Action Plans on 1325
While a number of Member States noted the importance of implementation
at the national level, only two made explicit reference to the development
of their own national action plans:
UK: “In London, we are currently developing
a Government-wide action plan for our implementation of resolution
1325 (2000), linking development, humanitarian, defence and diplomacy
work.”
Sweden: “We will develop a national plan
of action, and we hope that other Members will undertake similar
efforts and develop and report on their own plans.”
Although only 2 Member States referred to national action plans,
the Presidential Statement “welcomes the efforts of Member
States in implementing resolution 1325 (2000) at the national level,
including the development of national action plans, and encourages
Member States to continue to pursue such implementation.”
We will monitor the above action plans, as well as any others not
mentioned during the debate and share information in upcoming issues
of the
Newsletter as it becomes available.
Department of Political Affairs Gender Advisor
Establishing a gender advisory capacity in the Department of Political
Affairs (DPA) has been a focus of advocacy, especially since the
establishment of a gender advisor position in the neighboring Department
of Peacekeeping Operations.
Though Sweden was the only Member State to refer to a DPA gender
advisory capacity during the Open Debate, the Security Council,
in its Presidential Statement, “requests the Secretary-General
to consider an equivalent arrangement [to that of DPKO’s gender
advisor] within the Department of Political Affairs to further support
such implementation.”
We will monitor the discussions about the establishment of this
position, and share information in upcoming issues of the Newsletter
as it becomes available.
• Compilation of Open Debate Statements
Compiled by the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security
This compilation consists of excerpts arranged by theme (see below)
from the statements made during the Security Council Open Debate.
It should be noted that statements were included if they mentioned
the particular theme, regardless of what was said about the theme.
The statements that formed the basis of this research are all available
at: http://www.peacewomen.org/un/4thAnniversary/4thAnniversaryindex.html
Themes Examined:
- UN Security Council mechanism(s) for the implementation of SCR
1325
- UN mechanism(s) for the implementation of SCR 1325
- National mechanism(s) for the implementation of SCR 1325
- Women’s participation in peace negotiations/agreements
- Women’s participation in reconstruction processes
- Women’s participation in conflict prevention and early warning
- Gender and peacekeeping (Sexual Exploitation and Abuse, gender
training, gender balance/recruitment, gender-advisory capacity,
leadership, mandates/resolutions, HIV/AIDS, trafficking, DPKO action
plan, other peacekeeping actors, partnerships, and)
- Financial support for implementation of SCR 1325
- The NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security
The compilation is available at: http://www.peacewomen.org/un/UN1325/SCOpenDebate04Compilation.pdf
• With Renewed Energy Following October 2004, the
NGOWG on Women, Peace and Security Identifies Key Focus Areas to
Push 1325 into the Future
Backed by the momentum of the Open Debate and Anniversary events
this October, the NGOWG plans to further three issues that it advocated
for and Member States called for in their Open Debate interventions.
The three issues are:
(1) Pushing for the timely and effective development of a Secretary-General
led, UN system-wide Action Plan to implement Resolution 1325, to
be completed by October 2005 and survey women in conflict areas
for information they believe should be included in such an Action
Plan;
(2) Pushing for Member States to adopt National Level Action Plans
and drafting model National Action Plans for both donor states and
conflict states based on input from women in the field; and
(3) Pushing Security Council Members to establish a focal point
and expert-level working group to ensure integration of Resolution
1325 in the work of the Council.
In addition, the NGOWG looks forward to continuing its practice
of training and sharing information on best practices on SCR 1325
at the 49th Session Conference on the Status of Women and the Review
and Appraisal of the 1995 Beijing Conference and 2000 Conference.
We will also continue to advocate for the rapid establishment of
a gender advisor in the Department of Political Affairs, which the
Security Council asked the Secretary-General to consider in its
Presidential Statement adopted in October 2004 (S/PRST/2004/40).
As always, we look forward to collaborating with representatives
from civil society. Please contact the NGOWG’s Coordinator,
Cora True-Frost at (646) 234-1349 for more information.
PeaceWomen’s 4th Anniversary Index page: http://www.peacewomen.org/un/4thAnniversary/4thAnniversaryindex.html
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3.
1325 TRANSLATION UPDATE: 11 NEW TRANSLATIONS AVAILABLE |
TOTAL NUMBER OF AVAILABLE TRANSLATIONS:
61
As mentioned in previous issues of the newsletter, the UK FCO Translation
and Interpreting Services agreed to translate 1325 into 9 languages,
and send them to the WILPF PeaceWomen Project for circulation via
1325 PeaceWomen E-News and www.PeaceWomen.org, among other networks.
We have now received all 9 translations from the FCO:
Amharic
Kirundi
Kurdish - Kirmanji
Kinyarwanda
Shona
Punjabi
Swahili
Urdu
Vietnamese
We also recently received two new translations completed by members
organizations of the Women’s League of Burma: Kuki
and Rakhaing.
Coming soon: Marathi translation
For information about the translators, CLICK
HERE.
To view the 61 available translations, CLICK
HERE.
If you know of existing translations or potential translators, please
contact sarah@peacewomen.org.
Back to ToP
4.
WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY NEWS |
UN
HIGHLIGHTS GENDER-BASED VIOLENCE AND AIDS TREATMENT
December 1, 2004 - (UN News) On World AIDS Day the UN has highlighted
the importance of treatment, as well as the need to address violence
against women and girls, as an integral part of the global AIDS
response.
REPUBLIC
OF CONGO: WOMEN RAISE THEIR VOICES AGAINST VIOLENCE
November 29, 2004 - (IRIN) Hundreds of Congolese women appealed
to their government on Saturday for better protection against gender-based
violence, a persistent problem despite the end of years of fighting
in the country.
RWANDAN
WINS HUMAN-RIGHTS AWARD GENOCIDE PROMPTS SOCIAL WORKER TO DEVOTE
HER LIFE TO HELPING OTHER WOMEN
November 29, 2004 – (Globe and Mail-Canada) After the 1994
genocide in Rwanda, Godelieve Mukasarasi returned to her village
from a refugee camp with one goal in mind -- to pick up where she
left off months earlier.
HAITI:
ALARMING INCREASE IN THE NUMBER OF RAPES
November 25, 2004 - (Haiti Support Group press release) The Haiti
Support Group is extremely concerned about the reported increase
in the number of rapes in Haiti over recent months, and calls for
action to be taken to protect women and girls from sexual attacks
carried out by armed men.
SUDAN:
WAR AND RAPE IN DARFUR
November 24, 2004 – (International Herald Tribune) It's a
perennial problem. War occurs. Women are raped. Reporters flood
the war zone looking for raped women. War subsides. The international
community and the journalists lose interest in women's issues. Women
continue to be raped. No one cares.
UGANDA:
WOMEN GROUP ACCUSES UPDF OF WAR CRIMES
November 24, 2004 - (New Vision - Kampala) An international women's
group has accused the UPDF and Karimojong warriors of committing
crimes in the war-ravaged north. The Women's Initiatives for Gender
Justice (WIGJ), which has been monitoring the International Criminal
Court (ICC) activities in northern Uganda, said testimonies had
shown that it was not only the Lord's Resistance Army (LRA) rebels
committing crimes in the area.
For the press release issued by WIGJ, in collaboration with Isis-WICCE
and Ugandan Women Activists, CLICK
HERE.
MANO RIVER UNION: NOW ON-LINE: VOICES OF
PEACE/LES VOIX DE LA PAIX
November 2004 - The Mano River Women’s Peace Network has launched
a new on-line journal, “Voices of Peace,” on its website:
www.marwopnet.org/voicesofpeace.htm.
FIJI:
IT IS WISDOM …WHEN WOMEN SHARE IN DECISION MAKING
November 18, 2004 - (femLINKpacific) With a mission to get more
women elected or appointed into parliament, local government institutions
and policy making statutory bodies and communities, and setting
a target of 50% of women’s representation at all levels of
decision making by 2015, participants at this week’s national
consultation on Women in Decision Making, have formulated a draft
National NGO Plan of Action on Women in Shared Decision Making (WISDM),
which will now be fine tuned for implementation by a steering committee,
to be chaired by the National Council of Women.
For
more country-specific women, peace and security news, CLICK
HERE
For
more international women, peace and security news, CLICK
HERE
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5.
LITTLE GENDER PERSPECTIVE FOUND IN NEW UN REPORT ON THREATS,
CHALLENGES AND CHANGE |
In November 2003, the UN Secretary-General appointed
a 16-member High-Level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change to
“generate new ideas about the kinds of policies and institutions
required for the UN to be effective in the 21st century.”
The panel released its 95-page report, "A more secure world:
our shared responsibility," on 2 December 2004. The report
contains 101 recommendations covering six areas, considered the
greatest threats in the 21st century: continued poverty and environmental
degradation; terrorism; civil war; conflict between states; the
proliferation of weapons of mass destruction; and organized crime.
The Secretariat and UN Member States are now concurrently considering
the report. The UN Secretary-General will release a report, based
on the High Level Panel’s report, in March 2005.
We applaud the authors of the report for the inclusion of the recommendations
on the implementation of Resolution 1325 (#68) and the consultation
and involvement of women in peace processes (#19D).
Under the section on the protection of civilians, the High Level
Panel noted:
238. Of special concern is the use of sexual violence as a weapon
of conflict. The human rights components of peacekeeping operations
should be given explicit mandates and sufficient resources to investigate
and report on human rights violations against women. Security Council
resolution 1325 (2000) on women, peace and security and the associated
Independent Experts' Assessment provide important additional recommendations
for the protection of women. The Security Council, United Nations
agencies and Member States should fully implement its recommendations.
68. The Security Council, United Nations agencies and Member
States should fully implement resolution 1325 (2000) on women, peace
and security (238).
Under the section on prevention of conflict between and within States,
the Panel noted:
102. Mediators and negotiators need adequate support. Although the
demand for United Nations mediation has skyrocketed in the past
10 years, resources devoted to this function have remained minimal.
The deliberate under-resourcing of the Department of Political Affairs
of the United Nations Secretariat by Member States is at odds with
these same States’ professed desire for a strong United Nations.
The Department of Political Affairs should be given additional resources
and should be restructured to provide more consistent and professional
mediation support.
19. While the details of such a restructuring should be left to
the Secretary-General, it should take into account the need for
the United Nations to have:
… (d) Greater consultation with and involvement in
peace processes of important voices from civil society, especially
those of women, who are often neglected during negotiations.
At the same time, we note with concern the failure of the Panel
to comprehensively integrate gender in, for example, the proposal
to establish a UN Peacebuilding Commission, and more broadly in
its examination of post-conflict peacebuilding, peace enforcement
and peacekeeping capability and conflict between and within States.
We expect that UN Member States and UN entities, in recognition
of their existing commitments to SCR 1325, as well as the Beijing
Platform for Action, will urge the Secretary-General to incorporate
a comprehensive gender perspective in his report, and in the recommendations
he proposes.
The NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security was invited by
the UN Foundation in April 2004 to submit a paper to the UN High-Level
Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change. The paper makes the case
that persistent gender inequality is a significant threat to global
peace and security. Drawing on the voices of courageous women organizing
for peace, the paper urges a framework for collective action based
on the "3 Ps" - conflict prevention, the participation
of women in peace and security, and the protection of civilians
with consideration to the specific needs of women, men, girls and
boys.
To view the NGOWG paper, “No Women, No Peace: The Importance
of Women’s Participation to Achieve Peace and Security”,
CLICK HERE.
For the full report and related documentation, visit: http://www.un.org/secureworld/
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Inclusive Security, Sustainable
Peace: A Toolkit for Advocacy and Action
International Alert’s Gender and Peacebuilding Programme
and Women Waging Peace, November 2004
Inclusive Security, Sustainable Peace: A Toolkit for Advocacy and
Action is a resource for women peace activists, advocates and practitioners
in conflict-affected and post-conflict countries and for policy
makers and staff of major multilateral institutions, donor countries
and international NGOs. It is intended to enable women to engage
strategically in peacebuilding and security processes and can be
used as a reference guide; as a tool for advocacy and action; for
training and awareness-raising; or to enhance understanding and
the use of UN Security Council Resolution 1325, which requires parties
in a conflict to respect women’s rights and to support their
participation in peace negotiations and post-conflict reconstruction.
The Toolkit consists of:
Section 1: Introduction
User Guide | Conceptual Framework: Security, Peace, Accountability
and Rights | Key International Policies and Legal Mechanisms: Women's
Rights in the Context of Peace and Security | Human Rights
Section 2: Conflict prevention, resolution and reconstruction
Conflict prevention | Peace negotiations and agreements | Peace
support operations Post-conflict reconstruction
Section 3: Security issues
Disarmament, demobilisation and reintegration | Small arms, light
weapons and landmines | Security-sector reform
Section 4: Justice, governance and civil society
Transitional justice and reconciliation | Constitutional rights
and legislation Democracy and governance | Civil society
Section 5: Protecting vulnerable groups
Refugees and internally displaced persons | Sexual/reproductive
health, rights and services | HIV/AIDS | Children’s security
The toolkit can be downloaded free of charge at http://www.womenbuildingpeace.org/
or from http://www.womenwagingpeace.net
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7.
FEATURE STATEMENTS: A SAMPLING OF RECENT LETTERS, QUESTIONS
& INTERVENTIONS |
A Sudanese Civil Society Open Letter to
the UN Security Council Regarding the Sudan Peace Process
New Sudanese Indigenous NGOs (NESI Network)
November 18, 2004
We, the members of the Civil Society Organizations operating under
the umbrella of the New Sudanese Indigenous NGOs (NESI Network),
would like to seek the attention of the United Nations Security
Council and the international community at large regarding the Sudan
Peace Process.
…It is paramount, however, that the final peace accord be
signed now. The population has suffered enough. Women and girls
have been systematically raped; generations have been born to wars
and are not able to access education nor peace and security among
other basic rights.
…We strongly recommend the following for the upcoming UN Security
Council meeting on Sudan as integral issues to be embodied in its
(UN Security Council’s) Resolution:
1. That the Sudanese conflict is a very complex one and hence the
need for a North-North Dialogue, including the conflicts in Darfur
and Eastern Sudan among other marginalized of the Sudan. These dialogues
should be inclusive and pluralistic in nature, including other political
parties, armed groups, women and civil society in the North.
…4. Furthermore, all UN peacekeeping forces, African Union
(AU) among others should be gender-sensitive and mindful of the
plight of women and girls, who make up more than 60% of the Sudanese
population, and whose rights have been most violated during these
wars.
5. UN Security Council Resolution 1325 to be fully adopted within
the final peace accord for the Sudan.
On behalf of the entire Sudanese population, we are very grateful
for this very historic meeting and wish you the very best and wisdom
in your deliberations and efforts in resolving this extremely deplorable
war.
Signed by and on behalf of NESI Network Member Organizations.
Suzanne Jambo*, Coordinator, NESI Network
Nairobi, 18th November 2004
*Suzanne Jambo was one of seven civil society representatives to
speak to Security Council members at the recent Arria Formula on
SCR 1325 held on 21 October 2004. For her Arria statement, CLICK
HERE.
For the full letter, CLICK
HERE.
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
Questions on 1325 in the House of Lords, United Kingdom
15 November 2004
Baroness Thomas of Walliswood asked Her Majesty's
Government:
What progress has been made in the four years since the relevant
resolutions were passed in the United Nations Security Council and
the European Parliament to involve women in conflict management,
peace-building and post-conflict reconstruction in the Balkans,
the Middle East, Afghanistan and Africa?
The Minister of State, Foreign and Commonwealth Office (Baroness
Symons of Vernham Dean): My Lords, the United Kingdom strongly
supports these resolutions. Her Majesty's Government play a leading
role in promoting women's engagement in conflict resolution and
peace-building activities. We also support monitoring the implementation
of these resolutions. There has been progress, such as voter registration
initiatives in Afghanistan and Iraq focusing on women. There are
real successes. Forty per cent of voters in the recent election
in Afghanistan were women. But the international community needs
to continue to intensify efforts on these policies…
Due to a procedural error, the discussion in the House of Lords
was cut prematurely short. However, we understand that Baroness
Symons plans on holding a full briefing in the next few weeks to
continue the discussion.
For the transcript online, CLICK
HERE.
• • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• •
Marking the 4th Anniversary of 1325 in the Canadian Senate:
Statement by Honourable Senator Mobina Jaffer
3 November 2004
Honourable senators, did you ever have to run for your life? Were
you or a loved one a victim of sexual violence while your family
watched? Did you ever have to protect your young children from rape?
"In some countries the demands on women are limitless; but
in war, the most insane fantasies have found their expression. When
seven soldiers rape a woman or little girl, for them the woman is
no longer a human being, she is an object”…
For the full statements, and for the French version, CLICK
HERE.
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8.
FEATURE EVENTS: HIGHLIGHTING RECENT EVENTS |
16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence:
Violence Against Women and HIV/AIDS
25 Nov - 10 Dec 2004
The 16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence is an international
campaign originating from the first Women's Global Leadership Institute
sponsored by the Center for Women's Global Leadership in 1991.
For more information about the 16 Days, visit the website of the
Center for Women’s Global Leadership: http://www.cwgl.rutgers.edu/16days/kit04/theme.html
• News:
UN Officials Stress Need to Eliminate Violence Against Women
November 25, 2004 – (UN) United Nations officials, led by
Secretary-General Kofi Annan, today stressed the need for building
a world in which women enjoy their rights and freedoms on an equal
basis with men.
• News
– Fiji: Women Dressed in Black to Mark the Beginning of the
16 Days of Activism Campaign
November 25, 2004 - (femLINKpacific) A group of women attending
a Community Radio Consultation (CRC) in Suvaare all dressed in black
today to mark the beginning of the 16 Days of Activism Against Violence
Against Women.
For more international news on the 16 Days of Activism, CLICK
HERE.
• United Nations Secretary-General’s
Message on the International Day for the Elimination of Violence
Against Women
Secretary-General Kofi Annan, New York, 25 November 2004
…On this fifth International Day for the Elimination of Violence
against Women, let us be encouraged that there is a growing understanding
of the problem. But let us also pledge to do our utmost to protect
women, banish such violence, and build a world in which women enjoy
their rights and freedoms on an equal basis with men. For the full
message, CLICK
HERE.
• Women's League of Burma Statement on the International
Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women
25 November 2004
…The Women's League of Burma would like to reiterate that
organized violence against women and girls by the State has been
ongoing and the situation in Burma has not changed. Without genuine
political reform, no women and girls will be safe under the rule
of the Burmese junta.
For the full statement, CLICK
HERE.
• United States Congressional members seek end to
gender-based violence in Colombia: Letter to Colombian President
Uribe
US Congressional signatories, Washington, DC, 23 November 2004
…We are writing to you out of deep concern about recent reports
released by the United Nations Commission on Human Rights and Amnesty
International that indicate widespread violence against women is
occurring as a result of the armed conflict in Colombia. Gender-based
violence, in wartime or in peace, is unacceptable…Given the
pervasive nature of violence against women in the context of Colombia’s
armed conflict, we strongly urge the Colombian government to prioritize
efforts to end violence against women in conflict…
For the full letter, which includes a set of concrete recommendations,
CLICK
HERE.
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International meeting on Peace Negotiations from Women’s
Perspectives: How to empower the contribution of women in the resolution
of armed conflict in Colombia?
Friedrich Ebert Stiftung in Colombia-Fescol and UNIFEM
9 December 2004, Bogota Colombia
The major areas covered included: International commitments in the
area of women and armed conflict; Women in the construction of peace:
two international experiences; and the inclusion of a gender perspective
in the initiatives for the construction of peace. For more information,
contact Carmen de la Cruz, UNIFEM Colombia at: Carmen.Cruz@undp.org.
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• •
WILPF Australia 1325 Website Launch: www.1325australia.org.au
1 December 2004, Parliament House Canberra, Australia
A Website developed by WILPF Australia to further the implementation
of UN Security Council Resolution 1325 in the Australian context,
with funding assistance from the Australian Government’s Office
of the Status of Women (OSW) & support from the Womenspeak Network
“In launching the website we are celebrating the 4th Anniversary
of the passing of the UN Security Council Resolution 1325, Women,
Peace and Security. This is the first UN Resolution that specifically
highlights the impact of war and conflict on women and girls, and
the importance of women’s involvement in peace building.”
For more information about this event and the website, contact WILPF
Australia members: Lyn Lane at lynjlane@ozemail.com.au
or Margaret Bearlin at mbearlin@effect.net.au.
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UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations
(DPKO) Global Planning Meeting of DPKO Gender Advisors and Gender
Focal Points
15-19 November 2004, UN Headquarters, NY
The Department of Peacekeeping recently hosted a Global Planning
Meeting of DPKO Gender Advisors and Gender Focal Points. The meeting
was an opportunity for gender advisors and gender focal points to
“engage in a joint review and planning process in consultation
with key stakeholders within and outside of the UN, to refine and
enhance gender mainstreaming strategies in UN peacekeeping operations,
towards implementation of Security Council resolution 1325.”
The main objectives of the workshop were:
- To share information on progress to date and to identify common
challenges pertaining to gender mainstreaming in peacekeeping operations;
- To review and build consensus around policy and operational priorities
that should inform future gender mainstreaming strategies;
- To agree on a framework that will guide communications, planning,
monitoring, and reporting among gender advisors; and
- To review and explore partnership-building strategies for the
future.
During the 4-day meeting, the gender advisors and focal points briefed
each other on their work in their respective missions, engaged with
Member States, met with representatives of the different divisions
of DPKO, as well as representatives from other UN entities, such
as the Division for the Advancement of Women (DAW), the Office of
the Special Advisor on Gender Issues and Advancement of Women (OSAGI),
UNIFEM, and the UN Department of Political Affairs (DPA). In addition,
the Gender Advisors and Gender Focal Points met with members of
the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security.
For more information about this meeting, please contact Comfort
Lamptey, DPKO Gender Advisor, at: lampteyc@un.org.
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• •
Working Conference on Women Peace and Security
Held In San Diego California
18-20 November 2004, Joan B. Kroc Institute for Peace &
Justice, California, USA
The Promoting Women's Equal Participation in Peace & Security
Processes: Operationalizing UN Security Council Resolution 1325
working conference was held at the Joan B. Kroc Institute for
Peace & Justice (IPJ) from 17 November to 20 November, in San
Diego, California. Over 120 participants from 32 countries participated.
The event was co-convened by UNIFEM, the Boston Consortium on Gender,
Security and Human Rights, the Canadian Committee on Women, Peace
and Security, and the IPJ.
This conference intentionally mixed scholars, practitioners, NGO
and grassroots leaders with those who work to influence policy-making
at the UN, government and international agency/organizational levels.
The working sessions were small and facilitated for assuring that
all voices were heard and the outcomes were noted. Topics on the
first series of sessions included: Early Warnings/Conflict Prevention;
Gender Issues in Peace Support Operations; Child Soldiers; Reconciliation,
Reintegration and Rehabilitation; Protection of IDPs and Refugees,
Including Widows; Post-Conflict Elections; Engendered Transitional
Justice Mechanisms. On the second day regional and theme workshops
on the use of 1325 and other cross-sessional meetings were held.
Summaries of the working groups will be posted at http://peace.sandiego.edu
in about two weeks.
Interspersed between working group sessions were four public plenaries
to update attendees and others on the big pictures of women and
conflict. These included: “Gender-based Violence in Conflict:
Updates on Specific Protection Needs and Justice Issues of Women
and Children” which focused on the current research on and
experience of the impunity of violence specific to women caught
in conflict-affected countries; “Women at the Negotiation
Tables and Post-Conflict Decision-Making Bodies: Using UNSC Res
1325 and Other International Standards and Tools Calling for Gender
Inclusion; “Post-Conflict Reconstruction: Gender Dimensions
of Peacekeeping, Peacebuilding and Reintegration” on examining
issues related to the adoption of gender-inclusive and gender-equitable
frames in peacekeeping, peacebuilding, and reconstruction; and a
final panel looked at “Moving Forward Together: Building on
the Secretary General’s report on implementing UNSC Resolution
1325 toward Beijing+10, Millennium Development Goals+5 and the 2005
UN High-Level Event.”
Final reports on the conference will be posted as soon as possible
at the IPJ website. Please go to the website for more details on
presenters: http://peace.sandiego.edu/
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Gender And Small Arms: Moving Into The
Mainstream
Emily Schroeder and Lauren Newhouse
Monograph No 104, Institute for Security Studies, October 2004
This monograph presents a comprehensive overview of how gender language
is used at meetings and in documents of various United Nations fora
on the topic of small arms and light weapons (SALW). The monograph
begins with an overview of relevant definitions and emergence on
the global agenda of norms on SALW and gender mainstreaming at the
United Nations. The authors then scan statements from official meetings
and documents from the Security Council and the General Assembly
from 2001 to 2003, as well as the 2001 SALW Conference and the Biennial
Meeting of States on SALW in 2003. A list of ‘gender reference
indicators’ are used to assess the frequency of use and context
of references to evaluate points of conversion and diversion between
international norms on gender and SALW.
It is concluded that UN debates on SALW do not yet address gender
in the SALW context in a way that encompasses the differing social,
economic and political impacts of SALW on men and women. The final
section of the monograph reveals various observations and recommendations
looking towards the 2006 Review Conference on Small Arms and Light
Weapons.
The monograph is available at: http://www.iss.org.za/pubs/Monographs/No104/Contents.htm
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Women in Armed Opposition Groups Speak
on War, Protection and Obligations Under International Humanitarian
and Human Rights Law:
Report of a workshop organized by Geneva Call and the Program for
the Study of International Organization(s), August 26-29, 2004,
Geneva
By Dyan Mazurana
On 26-29 August, UNIFEM, along with several other entities, supported
a workshop organized by Geneva Call and the Programme for the Study
of International Organizations for women combatants from armed opposition
groups from 18 different conflict zones in Africa, Latin America,
Asia, Europe and the Middle East.
The workshop participants discussed international humanitarian law,
international human rights law, protection issues and DDR, and articulated
lessons learned for each of these issues among others.
For the report and executive summary, prepared by
Dyan Mazurana, CLICK
HERE.
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Review and Appraisal of the Implementation of the Beijing
Declaration and Platform for Action: Critical Area E. Women and
Armed Conflict
United Nations International Research and Training Institute for
the Advancement of Women (INSTRAW)
Reality check: Across the globe, women are struggling to survive
the horrors of armed conflict. Some women have grown-up knowing
nothing other than war, some have lived through every form of violence
imaginable, some are kidnapped and forced into sexual slavery, and
some have joined armed struggles as combatants. Women’s voices
are still not heard at the tables of peace negotiations, their needs
and interests are not reflected in peace treaties and cease-fire
agreements, and they are rarely among those making the decision
to go to war. The actions mandated by the Beijing Platform for Action
in order to address women and armed conflict remain all-too relevant
ten years after they were first called for. Despite these somber
realities, the past ten years have also seen certain positive developments
regarding the de-escalation of wars and new policies and actions
on women and armed conflict.
For the full report, visit: http://www.un-instraw.org/en/index.php?option=content&task=view&id=930&Itemid=204
From now until the March 2005 Session of the UN Commission on
the Status of Women, INSTRAW will be publishing progress reports
on the 12 Critical Areas of the Beijing Declaration and Platform
for Action.
These progress reports will be available on the INSTRAW website
at: http://www.un-instraw.org.
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Recent Publications by Women Waging Peace
Peace
In Sudan: Women Making the Difference - Recommendations
8-15 October 2004
Preparing
for Peace: The Critical Role of Women in Colombia
Conference Report, May 4-19 2004
November 2004
Negotiating
the Transition to Democracy and Reforming the Security Sector: Vital
Contributions of South African Women
August 2004
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Recent Reports by Amnesty International, Stop Violence Against
Women (VAW) Campaign
November 2004
Soloman
Islands: Women Confronting Violence
8 November 2004
Central
Africa Republic: Five Months of War Against Women
10 November 2004
Mexico:
Indigenous women and military injustice
23 November 2004
Women,
HIV/AIDS and Human Rights
24 November 2004
For more NGO and civil society reports, papers and statements, UN
and government reports, and books, journals and articles on women,
peace and security issues, CLICK
HERE.
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10.
WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY CALENDAR |
Gender and Conflict Transformation:
An Online Learning Course
The Network University
24 January - 18 February 2005
This four-week online course from The Network University will start
again at January 24 till February 18, 2005. This course brings together
worldwide expertise on the relationship between gender and conflict
transformation. This course will empower women to become key agents
in conflict transformation. The course uses a variety of interactive
methods that stimulate thinking and exchange. Visit the demosite
at www.netuni.nl/demos/genderconflict.
There are a limited number of scholarships available. For more information
and registration, visit www.netuni.nl
or contact Hanneke Oudkerk, at conflict@netuni.uva.nl.
Call for Papers: Gender and Constitution-building articles
needed for Critical Half, an international development journal
Women for Women International
Deadline: 1 February 2005
Women for Women International, is seeking submissions for the third
edition of its bi-annual academic journal, Critical Half. This issue
of the journal will focus on the institutionalization of gender
equality in post-war constitutions. The transition from conflict
to stability offers a unique window of opportunity to build a foundation
of gender equality that sets a precedent for the status of gender
relations throughout a society. We aim to examine this process,
including lessons learned from the experience of various countries.
We will also analyze the structural and situational factors that
can challenge the translation of constitutional language into effecting
change on the ground, such as socio-cultural resistance and lack
of resources and/or political will. For suggested topics, submission
guidelines, visit www.womenforwomen.org. For more information, contact
Lyla Bashan at lbashan@womenforwomen.org
or +1 202 737 7705.
NGO Consultation in preparation for Beijing Review: From
Mexico City to Beijing and Beyond: Realizing the Vision
27 February 2005, 8:30am-6:00pm, Barnard College, New York,
USA
Sponsored by the NGO CSW, New York
For more information contact: ngo_csw_ny@hotmail.com
For UN, governmental and NGO documents concerning the upcoming Beijing
+10 Review by the Commission on the Status of Women, during
its 49th Session, visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/un/Beijing10%20/beijing10index.html
For the complete calendar, CLICK
HERE.
Back
to Top
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