|
1325
PeaceWomen E-News
Issue #57
30 March 2005
FROM BEIJING +10 TO THE
SEPTEMBER SUMMIT 2005:
UN MEMBER STATES MUST PRIORITIZE WOMEN’S EMPOWERMENT AND GENDER
EQUALITY TO ACHIEVE DEVELOPMENT,
SECURITY AND HUMAN RIGHTS
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. PeaceWomen Analysis:
From Beijing +10 to the September Summit 2005: UN Member States
Must Prioritize Women’s Empowerment and Gender Equality to
Achieve Development, Security and Human Rights
2. Women, Peace and Security News
3. Beijing +10:
The Follow-Up Continues
4. UN Security Council Adopts Gender Language
in its Resolution Establishing a Peacekeeping Operation in Sudan
5. Gender and Peacekeeping Update:
UN Report on A comprehensive strategy to eliminate future sexual
exploitation and abuse in United Nations peacekeeping operations
6. Feature Report: Our
Common Interest - Report of the Commission for Africa
7. Feature Resources:
Worse Than a War: “Disappearances” in Chechnya—a
Crime Against Humanity (HRW); The Crushing Burden of Rape:
Sexual Violence in Darfur (MSF); Coming Home: Return and
Reintegration in Angola (HRW); and Decades of Suffering,
Now Women Deserve Better (AI)
8. Update from the NGOWG On Women, Peace
and Security: Recommendations to the Drafters of the
Terms of Reference for the UN Security Council Mission to Haiti
& More
9. 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.
From Beijing +10 to the September Summit
2005:
UN Member States Must Prioritize Women’s Empowerment and Gender
Equality to Achieve Development, Security and Human Rights
By Kara Piccirilli, PeaceWomen Project, WILPF-UN Office
On 21 March 2005, the day before the closing session of the 49th
Session of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW), the UN Secretary-General
(SG) released his report, entitled In Larger Freedom: towards
development, security and human rights for all. This report
addresses the recommendations put forward in the report of the SG’s
High-Level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change, A More Secure
World, and in the reports of the Millennium Project,* in preparation
for the review of the Millennium Declaration (14-16 September 2005).
Prior to the release of In Larger Freedom, UN Member States
had devoted months to achieve a negotiated political declaration
on the 10-year Review and Appraisal of the Beijing Platform for
Action, in which they committed themselves to integrate a gender
perspective in the high-level plenary meeting on the review of the
Millennium Declaration. In addition, they stated that the MDGs cannot
be achieved without the full implementation of the Platform for
Action. With the adoption of this declaration (4 March), governments
reaffirmed that women’s empowerment and gender equality are
cross-cutting issues to be addressed not only in the discussion
on the MDGs, but also in the security, human rights and UN reform
considerations on the agenda during the September Summit:
“We, the representatives of Governments…
3. Emphasize that the full and effective implementation of the Beijing
Declaration and Platform for Action is essential to achieving the
internationally agreed development goals, including those contained
in the Millennium Declaration and stress the need to ensure the
integration of a gender perspective in the high-level plenary meeting
on the review of the Millennium Declaration;”
- Paragraph 3, political declaration, E/CN.6/2005/L.1, 4 March 2005
Women’s rights advocates expected that the Secretary-General’s
report would reflect the momentum generated by the adoption of the
political declaration on the Beijing Platform, through the inclusion
of women-specific and gender-specific language in the recommendations
for governmental action. Instead, the report of the Secretary-General
collapses the seven strategic priorities identified by the UN Millennium
Project Taskforce on Education and Gender Equality- the advisory
body on the achievement of gender equality- into one proposed governmental
action under the section of the report on development, Freedom
from Want:
5(j) Reaffirm gender equality and the need to overcome pervasive
gender bias by increasing primary school completion and secondary
school access for girls, ensuring secure tenure of property to women,
ensuring access to reproductive health services, promoting equal
access to labour markets, providing opportunity for greater representation
in government decision-making bodies, and supporting direct interventions
to protect women from violence;
The words ‘women’ and ‘gender’ appear in
no other recommendation for governmental action in the annex of
In Larger Freedom, including those recommendations in the
sections on security and human rights.
In Larger Freedom should have been framed in the context
of the pre-existing governmental commitments made in the Beijing
Platform (1995), UNSC Resolution 1325 on women, peace and security
(2000), the Millennium Declaration (2000) and obligations under
the Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination
Against Women (CEDAW). In the Millennium Declaration, governments
committed “to combat all forms of violence against women
and to implement the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms
of Discrimination against Women” and “to promote
gender equality and the empowerment of women as effective ways to
combat poverty, hunger and disease and to stimulate development
that is truly sustainable.” Consequently, as UN Member
States develop their national responses to In Larger Freedom,
they must prioritize actions on women’s empowerment and the
achievement of gender equality in order to achieve the Millennium
Development Goals in the next ten years. Further, their commitments
and re-commitments to women’s empowerment and gender equality
must be reflected in the outcome to be adopted at the Summit in
September 2005.
In the coming weeks, civil society organizations will release analyses
on the different components of In Larger Freedom. We will
highlight the gender analyses in upcoming issues of 1325 PeaceWomen
E-News and on PeaceWomen.org.
For the Secretary-General’s report, In Larger Freedom,
visit: http://www.un.org/largerfreedom/.
For the report of the UN Millennium Project Taskforce on Education
and Gender Equality, visit: http://www.unmillenniumproject.org/reports/reports2.htm#03
* Many civil society organizations have expressed concern that the
work of the Secretary-General’s Panel of Eminent Persons on
Civil Society and UN Relationships was not formally incorporated
into In Larger Freedom.
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
Preparation for the September 2005 Summit: Important Dates
6-8 April 2005: Governmental plenary session on
the Secretary-General’s report as a whole, UN Headquarters,
New York
Governmental consultations, UN Headquarters, New York:
19-20 April 2005: Cluster I (peace & security)
Facilitators: HE Mr. John Dauth (Australia), HE Mrs. Laxanachantorn
Laohaphan (Thailand), HE Mr. Ali Hachani (Tunisia)
21-22 April 2005: Cluster II (development)
Facilitators: HE Mr. Christopher Fitzherbert Hackett (Barbados),
HE Mr. Nana Effah-Apenteng (Ghana), Mr. Valeriy P. Kuchinsky (Ukraine)
25-26 April 2005: Cluster III (rule of law and
protecting the vulnerable)
Facilitators: HE Mr. Iftekhar Ahmed Chowdhury (Bangladesh), HE Mr.
Roman Kirn (Slovenia)
27-28 April 2005: Cluster IV (institutional reform)
Facilitators: HE Mr. Ricardo Alberto Arias (Panama), HE Mr. Dirk
Jan van den Berg (Netherlands)
Civil society organizations should contact these UN Member States,
their own governments, as well as the current president of the UN
General Assembly, Mr. Jean Ping (Gabon), to urge them to promote
gender equality and the empowerment of women as integral cross-cutting
issues for discussion at the governmental consultations.
30 April 2005: Deadline for NGO input to the UN
NGO Liaison Service (UN-NGLS), which is compiling the NGO input/feedback
into a report of findings. Email input to anne.kawuki@unctad.org.
23-24 June 2005: NGO hearings on In Larger Freedom,
General Assembly hall, UN Headquarters, New York
For more on the UN-NGLS report of findings and the NGO hearings,
visit the UN-NGLS web portal on MDG +5: http://www.un-ngls.org/mdg.htm
Back to Top
2.
WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY NEWS |
FEMALE
DEATHS IN TSUNAMI FAR OUTNUMBER MALES
March 26, 2005 - (Reuters) The Asian tsunami that devastated countries
fringing the Indian Ocean on Dec. 26 may have killed up to four
times as many women as men, the international aid group Oxfam says.
DRC:
ITURI MILITIAS TAKE WAR TO CIVILIANS
March 23, 2005 - (IRIN) Three months after the resumption of fighting
between Lendu and Hema militias in Ituri, a district in the northeast
of the Democratic Republic of Congo (DRC), a vivid picture of human-rights
violations is emerging. Pregnant women have been gang raped, children
burnt to death and villages razed to the ground.
REPORT
FROM UN CSW/BEIJING PLUS 10
March 23, 2005 – (IWTC Women’s GlobalNet #273) This
report from the 49th Session of the UN Commission on the Status
of Women (February 28-March 11, 2005), also known as Beijing + 10,
was put together by Aileen Familara of Isis International Manila
and Asia-Pacific Women's Watch.
BURUNDI'S
WOMEN STILL LIVE IN FEAR OF VIOLENCE
March 22, 2005 - (afrol News) Hundreds of Burundian women interviewed
agreed that, despite the mild security improvements due the 2003
ceasefire, the climate of violence has actually increased. With
illicit arms increasingly accessible, violence has turned from war-related
incidences to revenge acts, sexual predation and armed robbery,
mostly victimising women, a new report shows.
SOUTHERN
AFRICA: CALL OF 30% WOMEN'S REPRESENTATION IN PUBLIC OFFICE BY 2005
March 17, 2005 - (Pambazuka News) Gender and Free Expression organisations
call for 30% women’s representation in public office by 2005
and adoption of Gender Guidelines in Budgeting in SADC.
For
more country-specific women, peace and security news, CLICK
HERE
For
more international women, peace and security news, CLICK
HERE
Back to Top
3.
BEIJING +10: THE FOLLOW-UP CONTINUES |
Close of the 49th Session of the Commission
on the Status of Women (CSW)
On 22 March 2005, the 49th Session of the CSW was brought to a close
with the adoption of the Bureau’s report on CSW49. The final
negotiations on the resolutions and the writing of the chairperson’s
summaries on the content of the panels and roundtables have been
completed. The resolutions and summaries were distributed at the
final meeting of the 49th Session. Final statements were made by
the CSW Chairwoman, Ms. Kyung-wha Kang, the UN Special Adviser on
Gender Issues, Ms. Rachel Mayanja, and governmental groups, as well
as individual States.
The resolutions adopted at the 49th Session will be available shortly
at: http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/Review/english/news.htm
Beginning of the 50th Session of the CSW
22 March 2005 also marked the beginning of the 50th Session of the
CSW, which included the announcement of the newly elected Bureau
members: Chair: El Salvador; and Vice-Chairs: Hungary, Indonesia,
Nigeria and the United Kingdom. Beyond the two themes for next year*,
we must now turn our attention to the programme of work and the
methods of work of the CSW.
Programme of work of the CSW
In 2006, the Economic and Social Council will adopt a new multi-year
programme of work, setting out the overall themes for the next 5
years of CSW. This is an important opportunity for civil society
to voice its ideas and concerns regarding the work of the CSW.
Methods of work of the CSW
At the closing of the 49th Session of the CSW, New Zealand presented
a statement on the working methods of CSW on behalf of the delegations
of Canada, Australia and New Zealand (CANZ). CANZ has presented
this statement during the previous three sessions of the CSW. Below
are some excerpts of this statement, illustrating the kinds of governmental
concerns that exist regarding the current methods of work of the
CSW:
“…It is time to take a new approach. We have had debates
on the Commission’s working methods in the past. But much
of those debates have focused on the pros and cons of negotiating
agreed conclusions versus negotiating resolutions. We would like
to move away from that debate, and ask why we need to have either.
While some formal documents may need to be adopted, negotiated outcomes
are not the full measure of the Commission’s value. The success
of a Commission should not be judged by the number of pages of agreed
text it produces. Negotiated texts such as agreed conclusions will
always have their place - this Commission still needs to consider
new and emerging issues as it did last year, for example, on the
role of men and boys. But agreed conclusions and resolutions should
not be the inevitable default activity of this Commission.
The real value in this Commission is that it provides a truly unique
forum for substantive exchange by capital based experts that exists
nowhere else. The increase of panel discussions and roundtables
over the last few years has been a significant improvement in the
Commission’s programme of work. Now, however, we need to work
on enabling more experts to actually attend them.
Next year we have the opportunity, in discussing our future work
programme, to re-examine our methods of work. In doing so, we should
examine the experiences of other functional commissions, including
the Commission on Sustainable Development…”
For the full statement by CANZ, CLICK
HERE.
*Themes for the 50th Session of the CSW:
Item 1: Enhanced participation of women in development: an enabling
environment for achieving gender equality and the advancement of
women, taking into account, inter alia, the fields of education,
health and work.
Item 2: Equal participation of women and men in decision-making
processes at all levels.
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
SCR 1325 References in the Government Statements Delivered
at Beijing +10
Colombia
La Consejeria Presidencial para la Equidad de la Mujer (CPEM) y
el Ministerio de Relaciones Exteriores conformaron la mesa de Mujer,
Paz y Seguridad que ha realizado el análisis y difusión
de la Resolución 1325 del Consejo de Seguridad y el Informe
del país sobre la implementaron de la misma; ha capacitado
a un grupo de mujeres de diferentes regiones en la prevención
y resolución de conflictos. Así pues, Colombia puede
mostrar leyes, compromiso político, acciones concretas y
resultados; sin embargo, persisten la violencia y las discriminaciones
contra la mujer que representan graves limitaciones para un mejoramiento
de sus condiciones de vida y para una mayor y efectiva participación
social y política.
Côte d’Ivoire
Pour leur part, les femmes ivoiriennes qui se sont fermement appropriées
la Résolution 1325 du Conseil de Sécurité de
l'ONU sur l'implication des femmes dans la résolution des
conflits et qui ont payé un lourd tribut au cours de cette
guerre fratricide, sont déterminées à prendre
la place qui leur revient afin de réussir à restaurer
définitivement la paix dans leur pays.
Fiji
A review of the National Security and defence has been undertaken
and the establishment of a national security framework in line with
UN Security Council Resolution (UNSCR) 1325. We call for the protection
of women and children in conflict situations and from the use of
rape and sexual abuse as a strategy of war, protection of women's
human rights defenders, and cease the recruitment of child soldiers.
Germany
Germany is deeply committed to the vision of Security Council Resolution
1325 (2000). During its non-permanent membership in the Security
Council, Germany put effort into integrating a gender perspective
into mandates for peace-keeping operations. We stress the need to
include women at all levels of peace negotiations and conflict resolution.
Norway
Since the adoption of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action
there has been more emphasis on women's role in relation to conflict.
It is five years since the Security Council adopted resolution 1325
on women, peace and security. Are we making full use of this instrument?
There has been some progress but not nearly enough. It is time to
evaluate how the resolution is being implemented.
Sri Lanka
Sri Lanka's women have suffered much in this period in a prolonged
internal conflict. We are of the view that more opportunities need
to be provided for women to participate in on going conflict resolution
and post conflict peace building as mandated by UN Security Council
Resolution 1325.
Sweden
It is time to break the silence surrounding gender-based violence.
It is time to talk about hideous crimes committed by men against
women, such as violence against women and children in the home,
violence in the name of honour and violence connected to prostitution
or trafficking in women and girls, including in situations of armed
conflict, crises and transition. In this connection we would like
to mention that Sweden fully support the implementation of Security
Council Resolution 1325 on women, peace and security. I would like
to inform you that we are in the middle of preparing an action plan
on 1325 and it's implementation on national, EU- and UN-level.
The full compilation will be available shortly at: http://www.peacewomen.org/un/Beijing10
/beijing10index.html
For information on the recent Review and Appraisal
of the Beijing Platform, CLICK
HERE.
Back to ToP
4.
UN SECURITY COUNCIL ADOPTS GENDER LANGUAGE IN ITS RESOLUTION
ESTABLISHING A PEACEKEEPING OPERATION IN SUDAN |
On 24 March, the UN Security Council unanimously
adopted resolution 1590 authorizing the establishment of the UN
Mission in the Sudan (UNMIS), for an initial period of six months.
Featured below are excerpts of the gender language found in the
operative paragraphs of the resolution:
…4. (a) (iv) To assist in the establishment of the disarmament,
demobilization and reintegration programme as called for in the
Comprehensive Peace Agreement, with particular attention
to the special needs of women and child combatants, and
its implementation through voluntary disarmament and weapons collection
and destruction;
(vi) To assist the parties to the Comprehensive Peace Agreement,
in addressing the need for a national inclusive approach, including
the role of women, towards reconciliation and peacebuilding;
(x) (d) To contribute towards international efforts to protect and
promote human rights in Sudan, as well as to coordinate international
efforts towards the protection of civilians with particular
attention to vulnerable groups including internally displaced persons,
returning refugees, and women and children, within UNMIS’s
capabilities and in close cooperation with other United Nations
agencies, related organizations, and non-governmental organizations;
…“14. Requests the Secretary-General to take
the necessary measures to achieve actual compliance in UNMIS with
the United Nations zero-tolerance policy on sexual exploitation
and abuse, including the development of strategies and appropriate
mechanisms to prevent, identify and respond to all forms of misconduct,
including sexual exploitation and abuse, and the enhancement of
training for personnel to prevent misconduct and ensure full compliance
with the United Nations code of conduct, requests the Secretary-General
to take all necessary action in accordance with the Secretary-General’s
Bulletin on special measures for protection from sexual exploitation
and sexual abuse (ST/SGB/2003/13) and to keep the Council informed,
and urges troop-contributing countries to take appropriate preventive
action including the conduct of pre-deployment awareness training,
and to take disciplinary action and other action to ensure full
accountability in cases of such conduct involving their personnel;
“15. Reaffirms the importance of appropriate expertise on
issues relating to gender in peacekeeping operations and post-conflict
peacebuilding in accordance with resolution 1325 (2000), recalls
the need to address violence against women and girls as a tool of
warfare, and encourages UNMIS as well as the Sudanese parties to
actively address these issues;…
The US-led Resolution 1590 on the Sudan was only adopted after
France agreed to postpone voting on their own resolution that would
refer war crime cases from Sudan to the International Criminal Court,
a move the US currently opposes. Another point of contention among
Security Council members concerns applying sanctions to Sudan.
For more gender language from the resolution, CLICK
HERE.
The PeaceWomen Project monitors the gender content of the Security
Council’s resolutions addressing all current and upcoming
peacekeeping operations, and features all of the Security Council's
gender language, including from the most recent resolution on Sudan,
on the following webpage: http://www.peacewomen.org/un/pkwatch/SCrescompilation.html
For news on women, peace and security issues in Sudan, visit PeaceWomen’s
Sudan News Page.
For UNIFEM’s country profile of Sudan, CLICK
HERE.
Back to Top
5.
GENDER AND PEACEKEEPING UPDATE |
A comprehensive strategy to eliminate
future sexual exploitation and abuse in United Nations peacekeeping
operations (A/59/710)
Prepared by the Secretary-General's Special Advisor on sexual exploitation
and abuse by United
Nations peacekeeping personnel, Jordan's UN Ambassador Prince Zeid
Ra'ad Zeid Al-Hussein
24 March 2005
The 2005 report of the Special Committee on Peacekeeping Operations
(A/50/19) requested the Secretary-General to make available a comprehensive
report with recommendations on the issue of sexual exploitation
and abuse by United Nations peacekeeping personnel - civilian, civilian
police and military personnel. The Secretary-General asked his Special
Advisor on sexual exploitation and abuse by United Nations peacekeeping
personnel, H.R.H Prince Zeid Ra'ad Zeid Al-Hussein, to prepare the
report.
Featured below are excerpts of the letter from the Secretary-General
to the President of the General Assembly, which accompanies the
report:
… As the allegations in the Democratic Republic of the Congo
surfaced, it became clear that the measures currently in place to
address sexual exploitation and abuse in peacekeeping operations
were manifestly inadequate and that a fundamental change in approach
was needed. I began a process of review to determine the nature
and extent of the problem and resolve it. As a first step, in July
2004, I invited His Royal Highness Prince Zeid Ra’ad Zeid
Al-Hussein, Permanent Representative of Jordan, to act as my adviser
and assist me in addressing the problem of sexual exploitation and
abuse by United Nations peacekeeping personnel. As the Permanent
Representative of a major troop- and police-contributing country
and a former civilian peacekeeper, Prince Zeid has brought a vital
perspective to the problem and potential solutions. Thus, when the
Special Committee on Peacekeeping Operations, in its 2005 report
(A/59/19), requested me to make available a comprehensive report
with recommendations on sexual exploitation and abuse by United
Nations peacekeeping personnel, I asked Prince Zeid to undertake
its preparation. This report I now submit to you. I would be grateful
if it could be made available to the members of the General Assembly.
The report before you represents the first comprehensive analysis
of the problem of sexual exploitation and abuse by United Nations
peacekeeping personnel. It contains bold recommendations directed
at both the Secretariat and Member States. In formulating the recommendations,
Prince Zeid drew on extensive consultations with Secretariat officials
and representatives of the troop- and police-contributing countries
that provide the most military and police personnel, as well as
on insights from a visit to the United Nations peacekeeping operation
in the Democratic Republic of the Congo from 24 October to 3 November
2004.
I believe that Prince Zeid’s analysis is a fair and honest
account of a serious problem. I concur fully with all recommendations
relating to the report’s four main areas of concern:
• The current rules on standards of conduct
• The investigative process
• Organizational, managerial and command responsibility
• Individual disciplinary, financial and criminal accountability
…The implementation of the report’s recommendations
will strengthen the ability of peacekeeping operations to promote
good conduct and discipline more broadly and increase the accountability
of managers and officers in this area. Since the problem of sexual
exploitation and abuse is not confined to peacekeeping contexts,
the report also offers many innovative ideas that could be applicable
to the wider United Nations system…
For the full report in all 6 official UN languages, visit: http://www.un.org/Docs/journal/asp/ws.asp?m=a/59/710
To read the Secretary-General's statement, delivered after he forwarded
the report to the General Assembly, CLICK
HERE.
For news coverage of the release of the report, CLICK
HERE.
The Special Committee on Peacekeeping Operations
is expected to reconvene in the coming weeks in order to review
the report. PeaceWomen will include more information about this
process as soon as it becomes available.
To stay informed about the follow-up on this report, visit PeaceWomen’s
Peacekeeping Watch webpage at: http://www.peacewomen.org/un/pkwatch/pkwatch.html
Back to TOP
Our Common Interest: Report of the Commission
for Africa
11 March 2005
The Commission for Africa was launched by British Prime Minister
Tony Blair in February 2004. Comprised of 17 members, 3 of whom
are women, “The aim of the Commission was to take a fresh
look at Africa’s past and present and the international community’s
role in its development path. The work set out to be comprehensive
and challenging, addressing difficult questions where necessary.
Five formal objectives* were established to guide the Commission’s
work (see link below). It was tasked with finalising its report
by early 2005 and producing clear recommendations for the G8, EU
and other wealthy countries as well as African countries”
(Commission website). The report and its recommendations are also
part of the preparations for the September 2005 summit in New York
City to review progress made since the United Nations Millennium
Declaration (2000).
*The five formal objectives can be found at:http://www.commissionforafrica.org/english/about/objectives.html
The Commission organized their work around six themes: Culture and
Participation; Economy; Governance; Human Development; Natural Resources;
and Peace and Security. In addition, they identified three principal
cross-cutting issues: HIV/AIDS, gender and youth.
Featured below are excerpts of the gender language found in the
388-page report:
4.3.2 Constitutional structures, parliaments and political processes
54…The position of women in government is poor. Many African
governments have made concerted efforts to raise awareness of the
importance of women’s involvement – South Africa, Uganda,
Rwanda and Mozambique have levels of women’s representation
in parliament ahead of most developed countries. But most countries
fall well short of gender equality at all levels of political decision-making.
This is despite evidence that corruption falls as the proportion
of parliamentary seats held by women rises and the fact that many
Africans believe women MPs are more likely to listen and attend
to basic community needs. Whether men or women, parliamentarians
need better knowledge and capacity to address gender concerns –
such as review of inheritance and property tax rights and of laws
or customary practices that discriminate against women – and
to mainstream gender into sector policies and budget processes…
5.1 The case for prevention
16. At all levels, actors should promote the full implementation
of UN Resolution 1325 (2000) on the role of women in peace processes
and the impact of armed conflict on women and girls.
6.5.3 Building strategies against exclusion and vulnerability
119. Recommendation: Donors and African governments should
provide direct budgetary support to pan-African organisations to
support their work in protecting women and children’s rights.
African governments must honour the progressive and exciting commitments
made in the African Heads of State Solemn Declaration on Gender,
which includes the implementation of the Convention for the Elimination
of Discrimination Against Women. African civil society and governments
have also identified specific actions at the Beijing+10 in Africa
meeting, 2004. Donors and African Governments should provide financial
and other support to the Gender and Development Directorate of the
AU, to AU/NEPAD and to the African Gender and Development Centre
of the Economic Commission for Africa.
For the full report and for more information about the Commission,
visit: http://www.commissionforafrica.org/index.html
For the Solemn Declaration on Gender Equality in
Africa, adopted by the Heads of State and Government of Member States
of the African Union in July 2004 at their Summit meeting in Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia, CLICK
HERE.
Back to TOP
Worse Than a War: “Disappearances”
in Chechnya—a Crime Against Humanity
A Human Rights Watch Briefing Paper
March 2005
…The available evidence shows that enforced disappearances
in Chechnya are both widespread and systematic. According to government
statistics, at least 2,090 people have “disappeared”
since the conflict started in 1999; human rights groups estimate
the figure to be between three thousand and five thousand. As this
briefing paper shows, the victims are always civilians or individuals
who, when taken from their homes, checkpoints or other locations,
are unarmed—they are hors de combat. They are predominantly
men between eighteen and forty years old…
Recently Russian and Chechen security forces have also increasingly
targeted women—a trend that may be linked to the fact that
a number of
women were among the perpetrators of recent terrorist attacks in
Russian cities.
For the full report, visit: http://hrw.org/backgrounder/eca/chechnya0305/
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
The Crushing Burden of Rape: Sexual
Violence in Darfur
Medecins Sans Frontieres (MSF) Briefing Paper, 7 March 2005
…In spite of high-profile visits of the world’s leaders,
people still face persecution and intimidation inside the camps.
Rape, a feature of the attacks on their villages, has now followed
them insidiously into their places of refuge. Families, in order
to sustain themselves, have to continue collecting wood, fetching
water or working their fields. In doing so, women have to make a
terrible choice, putting themselves or their children at the risk
of rape, beatings or death as soon as they are outside the camps,
towns or villages. Rape has serious consequences for women’s
health and well-being, especially without adequate access to health
care and general proper attention.
Between October 2004 and the first half of February 2005, doctors
from Médecins Sans Frontières (MSF) treated almost
500 rape victims in Darfur. Given the great sense of shame, humiliation
and fear felt by victims of sexual violence, a sense which discourages
them from going to a health facility to receive treatment, MSF strongly
believes that the numbers recorded are only a partial representation
of the real number of victims…
For the full briefing paper, CLICK
HERE.
• • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
Coming Home: Return and Reintegration
in Angola
Human Rights Watch, March 2005
Excerpts regarding the exclusion of women from the DDR process:
…In Struggling Through Peace: Return and Resettlement in Angola,
Human Rights Watch expressed concern that the DDR process excluded
women, including the wives and widows of former UNITA combatants,
women abandoned by UNITA combatants, and women and girls abducted
during the war and forced to join UNITA forces as “wives,”
porters or in other support functions. These women are still suffering
the social and psychological effects of the war. One government
official told Human Rights Watch of his fear of stigmatizing underage
ex-combatants and women and girls who were exploited during the
war. He described plans to work with child protection NGOs to provide
trauma counseling and life skills training to rehabilitate and reintegrate
women and girls who were raped and sexually abused during the war.
Human Rights Watch also reported on the exclusion of underage ex-combatants
during the demobilization process in Forgotten Fighters: Child Soldiers
in Angola (2003). The ADRP attempts to address these problems by
mandating that each reintegration project include a “social
component” to assist women, children and the disabled, either
directly or through community-based projects. In Caala, for example,
the ADRP is funding a business training and micro-finance project
for 400 widows and female ex-combatants…
For the full report, which includes recommendations directed at
the Angolan government, donor community, and UN agencies, visit:
http://hrw.org/reports/2005/angola0305/
• • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
Decades of Suffering, Now Women Deserve
Better
Amnesty International, 22 February 2005
… This report is part of Amnesty International’s Stop
Violence Against Women campaign. It focuses on the many ways in
which women and girls in Iraq have suffered from government repression
and armed conflict in disproportionate or different ways from men,
and also how they have been targeted as women. It also shows how
discrimination is closely linked to violence against women, and
the particular ways in which women have suffered from the breakdown
in law and order in many parts of the country since the overthrow
of the government of Saddam Hussain.
Among the recommendations made in this report, Amnesty International
calls on the Iraqi authorities and members of the National Assembly
to ensure that the new constitution and all Iraqi legislation contain
prohibitions on all forms of discrimination against women, and that
effective measures to protect women from violence are introduced
and supported.
For the full report, visit: http://web.amnesty.org/library/Index/ENGMDE140012005
For 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.
Back to TOP
8.
UPDATE FROM THE NGO WORKING GROUP ON WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY
|
Recommendations to the Drafters of the Terms
of Reference for the UN Security Council Mission to Haiti
16 March 2005
On the occasion of the drafting of the Terms of Reference for the
upcoming Security Council (SC) Mission to Haiti (13-16 April 2005),
the NGOWG on Women, Peace and Security shared a series of recommendations
for incorporating UN Security Council Resolution 1325 into the Terms
of Reference.
Recognizing the many demands on both SC Members and women in
Haiti during this brief SC mission, and recalling SC Resolution
1325 on women, peace and security,
The NGOWG recommends that the Security Council:
1. Meets with local and national women's organizations. Further,
the SC should schedule and arrange these meetings as soon as possible
in order to: allow adequate timing for coordination; maximize inclusion
of rural women's groups; and to secure funding for the organizations,
if necessary, for any related costs.
2. Holds a meeting with Senior Gender Advisor, Nadine Puechguirbal,
during this mission.
3. Incorporates a gender perspective and women-centered approach
throughout this mission, including in the resulting report(s) and/or
mandate, inter alia, by ensuring gender-knowledgeable staff participate
in each phase of this SC mission. Gender-knowledgeable staff should:
assist in advance coordination of the mission, attend meetings during
the mission, and assist in drafting the resulting report and/or
mandate.
The recommendations are available at:http://www.peacewomen.org/un/ngo/ngostatements/HaitiSCMissionTORrecs.html
For updates on the preparations for the Security Council mission
to Haiti, visit the UN Security Council news index at: http://www.un.org/sc/unsc_news.shtml
or http://www.un.org/Docs/sc/
For women, peace and security resources on Haiti, CLICK
HERE.
For more information about women, peace and security issues in Haiti,
visit UNIFEM’s Haiti profile at:
http://www.womenwarpeace.org/haiti/haiti.htm
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
Urgent International Attention Needed to Eastern Democratic
Republic of the Congo
21 March 2005
The NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security (NGOWG) expresses
its grave concern about the situation faced by the population in
the eastern region of the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC),
particularly women and girls, during this time of conflict. Women
active in grassroots organizations in the DRC have contacted the
NGOWG to ask for its support and to request that UN headquarters
give attention to the world’s bloodiest war, act to stop the
atrocities, and support elections in the DRC…
For the full statement, CLICK
HERE.
For the French translation of this statement, CLICK
HERE.
The NGOWG’s action alerts and updates are now posted on the
NGOWG website at: http://www.peacewomen.org/un/ngo/actionalerts.html
For more NGOWG updates, CLICK
HERE.
Back to Top
9.
WOMEN, PEACE & SECURITY CALENDAR |
Seminar: Women Pioneering Peace-Building
in Africa
1 April 2005, 8:30am-4:00pm, SRC Chamber, Conference Centre,
Main Campus, University of Pretoria, South Africa
The Centre for International Political Studies (CiPS), UP, All Africa
Women for Peace (AAWP) and the Royal Netherlands Embassy cordially
invite you to participate in a one-day seminar on Women Pioneering
Peace-Building in Africa. Women in Africa are playing increasingly
strategic roles towards building human security on the continent.
Many women are engaging more innovative methodologies towards restoring
peace in their communities. This seminar aims to showcase some of
these initiatives that are being pioneered by women. This event
is free of charge. RSVP: By e-mail to mrjobson@lantic.net,
or fax to (012) 346 3359.
Conference - Women in War: Law and Gender in Situations
of Conflict
8-9 April 2005, Harvard Law School, Cambridge, MA, USA
The Harvard Journal of Law & Gender will be holding its annual
conference this year on "Women in War: Law and Gender in Situations
of Conflict," exploring the myriad ways that women participate
in and experience violent conflict. The Conference brings together
leading legal and policy scholars, practitioners, and students who
are interested in analyzing war and its many facets and effects
through a gender-conscious lens. Ms. Rachel N. Mayanja, the UN Special
Adviser on Gender Issues and the Advancement of Women, will be the
Keynote Speaker. Conference panels focus on women combatants, war
crimes and women, women's role in peace processes, issues of gender
for refugees and internally-displaced persons, and women's rights
and status in Iraq and Afghanistan.
Advance registration is $5 for Harvard students, $15 for other students,
and $35 for non-students. For more information and to register,
please visit: http://www.law.harvard.edu/students/orgs/wjl/.
Online registration ends 5 April at 5pm.
Towards Equality: The Global Empowerment of Women
28 April 2005, 8:30am – 1:00pm, Kaufman Conference Center,
12th Floor, Institute of International Education, 809 United Nations
Plaza, New York
RSVP by 8 April 2005
The event is co-sponsored by the National Council for Research on
Women, UNIFEM, and the Bureau of Educational and Cultural Affairs
of the U.S. Department of State. Thirty one global New Century Scholars
from the U.S., South Africa, Kenya, Peru, India, Sri Lanka, Ukraine
and other countries will discuss ways in which women working together
can advance their roles around the world in the educational, political,
economic and policy spheres. Topics to be addressed are: Responses
to Violence against Women and the Implementation of UN Security
Council Resolution 1325; Using Feminist Analysis to Assess the Effects
of HIV/AIDS Interventions on Female Sexuality and Autonomy; Negotiating
Citizenship and Diversity: Gender, Nation, Diaspora; Gender, Neoliberal
Governance and Globalization: Analytical and Practical Alternatives
to Contemporary Global Hegemonies; and Voices of Women in Egypt
and Senegal. As seating is limited, please respond by April 8 via
e-mail to hzahid@iie.org or
by phone to Hajra Zahid at 202-686-6250. Include your full name,
institutional affiliation, and e-mail to ensure registration. Please
visit the link for details: http://www.cies.org/NCS/2004_2005/letter_04_05.htm.
Back to Top
The
PeaceWomen is a project of the Women's International League for
Peace and Freedom (WILPF).
Previous issues of 1325 PeaceWomen E-News can be found at: http://www.peacewomen.org/news/1325News/1325ENewsindex.html.
At this time 1325 PeaceWomen E-News is only available in English.
The PeaceWomen Team hopes to translate the newsletter into French
and Spanish in the future. If you would not like to receive the
English newsletter but would like to be placed on a list when translation
is possible, please write to: 1325news@peacewomen.org.
To unsubscribe from the 1325 PeaceWomen News, send an email to 1325news@peacewomen.org
with "unsubscribe" as the subject heading.
Questions, concerns and comments can be sent to 1325news@peacewomen.org.
1325 E-News and other submissions should be directed to 1325news@peacewomen.org.
|