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1325
PeaceWomen E-News
Issue
#65
30 July 2005
CALL FOR CANDIDATES FOR OCTOBER 2005:
ADVOCACY ON WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY AT UN HEADQUARTERS
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. Welcoming the New PeaceWomen
Team
2. Results from 1325 PeaceWomen E-Newsletter
Evaluation Questionnaire
3. Women, Peace and Security News
4. 1325 Translation Update:
Fongbe (Benin), Slovak, and Uzbek Translations Now Available
5. 33rd Session of the Committee on the
Elimination of Discrimination Against Women
(5-22 July 2005)
6. A Gender and Peacekeeping Update:
Designing an Action Plan to Guide Implementation of UN Security
Council Resolution 1325 in the Department of Peacekeeping Operations
(DPKO)
7. NGOWG Update:
Call for Candidates for October 2005 - Advocacy on Women, Peace
and Security at UN Headquarters
8. UNIFEM Update:
International Women’s Commission Established by Palestinian,
Israeli and International Women for a Just and Sustainable Peace"
9. Upcoming Initiatives:
The 2005 Peace Building Cyberdialogues on UNSCR 1325: Linking New
York, Kampala, Monrovia, Oslo, Dili, Bougainville, Bangkok and more
(IWTC) & Norway - 2005 TV campaign on Violence Against Women!
(FOKUS) & Canada - Call to Join Working Group to organize Third
Annual Symposium on Women, Peace and Security (CCWPS)
10. Feature Statements:
“International Law Obligates the US to Uphold the Rights of
Iraqi Women- An Open Letter to the US Ambassador to Iraq”
(MADRE) & “Women’s participation is a key to lasting
peace and security- Letter to Prime Minister Tony Blair and Secretary
of State for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs Jack Straw”
(Kvinna till Kvinna)
11. Feature Resources:
“Women, Girls and Urban Gun Violence - A Case Study on Rio
de Janeiro” (Viva Rio and Peace Studies Group) & “UN
Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs’ Policy
on Gender Equality” (OCHA)
12. Women, Peace and Security Calendar
The PeaceWomen is a project of the Women's International
League for Peace and Freedom. Please visit us at http://www.peacewomen.org.
1.
WELCOMING THE NEW PEACEWOMEN TEAM |
Dear 1325 Colleagues and Friends,
We would like to take this opportunity to say farewell as we prepare
to hand over the PeaceWomen Project to a new PeaceWomen team.
After three years with the PeaceWomen Project, we are leaving the
UN community at Headquarters to continue our women, peace and security
advocacy in new and different communities: Sarah has been pre-selected
to serve as a UN Volunteer Gender Advisor in the Gender Unit of
the UN Mission in the Sudan (UNMIS); and Kara is moving to Nottingham,
England, to study for an LLM in International Human Rights Law with
a focus on women, peace and security issues.
As we look ahead, the five-year review of the implementation of
SCR 1325 lies just beyond this year’s 2005 World Summit in
September. Beyond October 2005, women’s rights organizations
plan to incorporate the women, peace and security agenda into the
thematic work of the 50th Session of the Commission on the Status
of Women (CSW50) and in its program of work for the years to come.
Amidst the forward-looking planning for the 2005 World Summit, review
of 1325 and CSW50, the Women’s International League for Peace
and Freedom PeaceWomen Project will also look to the future in fresh,
new ways.
We are therefore honored to introduce the two new PeaceWomen Project
Associates, Milkah Kihunah and Sam Cook, the new editor of the 1325
PeaceWomen E-Newsletter:
Milkah Kihunah holds a master’s degree in
international relations from Yale University (2005) where her studies
centered on regional and global trends in conflict management and
the human security challenges facing women. She trained as a lawyer
in her native Kenya, and has worked in human rights research and
advocacy with the Kenya Human Rights Commission in Nairobi, leading
a project to document cases of torture and maltreatment of detainees
by the colonial-era government. She has also worked with Africa
Action in Washington DC where she helped to craft a campaign to
press for greater US engagement in efforts to arrest the ongoing
violence in Western Sudan.
Milkah can be reached at Milkah@peacewomen.org.
A lawyer from Cape Town, South Africa, Sam Cook
has a LLM degree from Columbia University School of Law in New York.
Sam has a long-held interest in transitional justice and gender
and focused on these themes during the course of her master’s
degree. Her LLM paper explored issues around how the South African
and Sierra Leonean Truth and Reconciliation Commissions dealt with
sexual and gender-based violence. During her training as a lawyer
and in her subsequent research and work, Sam has been involved in
a number of women’s rights issues, particularly violence against
women. Other than her work as an attorney, she has worked with a
number of women’s NGOs in South Africa and at the law faculty
of the University of Cape Town.
Sam can be reached at Sam@peacewomen.org.
To contact Sarah Shteir, please email: SarahShteir@yahoo.com.
To contact Kara Piccirilli, please email: karapic@yahoo.com.
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• • • • • • • •
A WILPF Farewell
WILPF waves good-bye to Sarah and Kara with sadness and gratitude.
You both have given unstintingly to women, recognizing what enormous
waste it is when women's voices aren't heard; recognizing that the
violence women suffer must be stopped; strategizing always to get
a place for women at the table.
Take WILPF with you. Carry PeaceWomen in your hearts. We won't forget
you and we expect to read about you both in the 1325 E-Newsletter.
Mary Ann McGivern, Director
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
United Nations Office
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2.
RESULTS FROM 1325 PEACEWOMEN E-NEWSLETTER EVALUATION QUESTIONNAIRE
|
As of 21 July 2005, we received 19 responses to
the questionnaire. We depend on your comments and suggestions in
our efforts to strengthen the 1325 PeaceWomen E-Newsletter and ensure
that it remains a useful tool in our broader effort to monitor and
advocate for the full implementation of SCR 1325.
The 1325 PeaceWomen E-Newsletter has approximately 1,395 subscribers,
representing 101 countries. Together with the readership figures
for the other email lists that the E-Newsletter is sent to, we have
determined that approximately 3,680 individuals receive the 1325
PeaceWomen E-Newsletter on a regular basis. We have come a long
way from our first issue in May 2002 with its 300 subscribers.
While the responses gathered are a very small sample of the overall
1325 PeaceWomen E-Newsletter readership, they have been valuable
nonetheless.
Of the 19 respondents, 11 use SCR 1325 in their own work.
Almost all of the respondents read the newsletter for information
updates about SCR 1325 (15) and specific women, peace and security
issues (10). A smaller number of the respondents read the newsletter
for information updates about a specific geographic region (8) and
to seek opportunities for action (7). One respondent suggested that
the “newsletter could be a very good forum to mobilize women
from different regions on one specific topic/event. It has a very
good coordinative function.”
The three sections of the E-Newsletter that were identified as most
useful are:
1. Women, Peace and Security News
2. Feature Resource/s, Statement/s, Report/s, and Analysis/es
3. Gender and Peacekeeping Update
Respondents requested more information about:
1325 implementation successes;
Women peace makers from conflict zones, in the form of profiles;
Women in the Pacific region; and
Partnerships between women’s groups in the North and
women’s groups in the South, with analysis of ‘best
practices’ and challenges faced.
Respondents also suggested:
Introducing an ‘employment opportunities’ section;
and
Announcing initiatives of the NGOWG on Women, Peace and Security
before they happen with information about opportunities for broader
participation.
We are very grateful to the questionnaire respondents. If you have
comments, please send them by questionnaire response, or directly,
to: 1325news@peacewomen.org.
If you would like to fill out the evaluation form, please email
1325news@peacewomen.org.
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3.
WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY NEWS |
IRAQ:
FEARS GROW FOR WOMEN'S RIGHTS AS DEADLINE LOOMS FOR CONSTITUTION
DRAFT
July 28, 2005 - (IRIN) As the August deadline for completion of
the Iraqi constitution nears, there are continuing calls for delegates
to include provisions protecting women's rights in the family and
society more generally.
ISRAEL
- PARLIAMENT/KNESSET PASSES NEW LAW MANDATING INCLUSION OF WOMEN
FOR PEACE & SECURITY NEGOTIATIONS & POLICY
July 21, 2005 - (Isha L'Isha News Release) Haifa Feminist Center
is pleased to announce that the Knesset, Israel's Parliament, has
just passed a new law mandating the inclusion of women in teams
appointed for peace negotiations and setting domestic, foreign or
security policy. This law, an amendment to the 1956 Equal Representation
of Women law, is a major milestone in the advancement of women's
rights in Israel.
WITH
UN SUPPORT, HAITIAN WOMEN MOBILIZE AS ELECTION CANDIDATES
July 20, 2005 - (UN) Following up on a United Nations seminar, a
group of Haitian women have launched a support network for women
candidates in the upcoming elections in the impoverished Caribbean
country.
PEACE
BEGINS WITH MOTHERS, DAUGHTERS, SISTERS
July 20, 2005 - (IPS) Women are at the forefront of community-level
conflict resolution but are rarely included in higher-level peace
processes, leading to a sexist politics of peace, declared four
experts on women's involvement in peace negotiations Monday.
UN
SEX ABUSE SACKINGS IN BURUNDI
July 19, 2005 - (BBC) Two United Nations peacekeepers in Burundi
have been sacked after having sex with prostitutes and minors. UN
spokesman Penangnini Toure said the two soldiers had been found
guilty of breaking a strict code of conduct which forbids sex with
prostitutes.
UNIFEM
CALLS FOR STRONGER INTERNATIONAL SUPPORT FOR WOMEN'S PARTICIPATION
IN PEACE PROCESSES
July 18, 2005 - (UNIFEM Press Release) United Nations Development
Fund for Women (UNIFEM) called on the international community today
to recognize women's efforts to prevent and resolve conflict in
their communities, and to strengthen support for women's inclusion
as full and equal participants in formal peace processes.
AFGHANISTAN:
VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN REMAINS DRAMATIC - UN EXPERT
July 18, 2005 – (UN) From forced child marriages entailing
physical and sexual abuse to the public execution of a woman on
local council's orders, from girls burning themselves to death out
of despair to impunity for abusers, violence against women in Afghanistan
is a dramatic problem that must be addressed now, a top United Nations
expert said today.
BOSNIA
AND HERZEGOVINA: AFTER GENOCIDE, WOMEN'S WORK IS TO REBUILD
July 17, 2005 - (WeNews) Last week thousands visited the field in
Bosnia and Herzegovina where husbands, sons and brothers were killed
in the largest European genocide since World War II. Now the women
of Srebrenica go back to making life's work out of devastation.
VIOLENCE
AGAINST WOMEN IN NORTHERN UGANDA
July 17, 2005 - (AI) "When we were given to our husbands we
were expected to have sex with them. I was only 10 years old when
I was handed over. For days after, I was sexually abused. The first
time I felt a lot of pain because he was too big. He told me he
was nearly forty years old. I felt so bad because I was still young,
but I had to accept to sleep with him. I was afraid that if I refused
he would carry out his threat to kill me. I had no love for that
man."
SIERRA
LEONE: WOMEN ADVOCATE FOR MORE EMPOWERMENT
July 15, 2005 - (The Independent) The Network of Women Ministers
and Parliamentarians (NEWMAP) in Sierra Leone are making significant
strides to improve the welfare and status of women in the country.
They are also currently collaborating with the Mano River Peace
Network (MARWOPNET) that involves Sierra Leone, Liberia and Guinea.
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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4.
1325 TRANSLATION UPDATE
|
Fongbe, Slovak and Uzbek Translations Now
Available
TOTAL NUMBER OF AVAILABLE TRANSLATIONS: 69
PeaceWomen recently received a Fongbe translation, a Slovak translation,
and an Uzbek translation of SCR 1325.
The Fongbe translation was completed by Solange
Nouatin Attakla, the Program Officer for the Women in Peacebuilding
Network (WIPNET) in Benin, as part of the WIPNET regional initiative
to localize SCR 1325 in West Africa. WIPNET is a program of the
West African Network for Peacebuiding (WANEP).
According to Ecoma Alaga, WIPNET’s Regional Coordinator, “For
us at WANEP, this Resolution gives resonance to the work we do in
WIPNET - building women's capacity to play more active and visible
roles in promoting peace and human security in the sub region.”
Fongbe is a major West African ethnic and linguistic group in the
country of Benin, a country made up of more than 2,000,000 people.
The Fongbe language is the main language spoken in Southern Benin,
and is a member of the Gbe language group. Fongbe is spoken by approximately
1.7 million people.
For more information, contact:
Solange Nathalie Nouatin Attakla
WIPNET Program Officer
WANEP - Benin
081 B.P. 7033 Aeroport, Cotonoe, Benin
Email: sol_attakla@yahoo.fr
Phone: +229 960423
For more information about WIPNET, visit: http://www.wanep.org/programs/wipnet.htm.
The Slovak translation was completed by:
MSc. Rut Erdelyiova, Programme director of the Slovak Youth Foundation
and Jozef Dolnik MD., Surgeon and member of educational staff of
the Medical Faculty of Comenius University.
For more information about the Slovak translation, contact Rut Erdelyiova
at: erdelyiova@nadacianms.sk.
The Fongbe, Slovak, and Uzbek translations are all available at:
http://www.peacewomen.org/1325inTranslation/index.html.
For information about the translators of the available 69 translations,
CLICK
HERE.
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5.
33rd SESSION OF THE COMMITTEE ON THE ELIMINATION OF DISCRIMINATION
AGAINST WOMEN |
States should eliminate stereotypical
attitudes, address the special needs of ethnic and rural women,
and withdraw any reservations to the Convention, says Committee
5-22 July 2005, UN Headquarters, New York
The Committee considered the reports on national implementation
of CEDAW from the following States parties: Benin, Burkina Faso,
Democratic People's Republic of Korea, Gambia, Guyana, Ireland,
Israel, and Lebanon. For more information, visit: http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/cedaw/33sess.htm.
The WILPF PeaceWomen Project monitored the 33rd Session. The PeaceWomen
report on the 33rd Session of CEDAW will be posted on 1 August 2005
at: http://www.peacewomen.org/un/ecosoc/CEDAW/33rdSession/CEDAW33.html.
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6.
A GENDER AND PEACEKEEPING UPDATE |
Designing an Action Plan to Guide Implementation
of UN Security Council Resolution 1325 in the Department of Peacekeeping
Operations
Comfort Lamptey, Gender Advisor, Department of Peacekeeping
Operations (DPKO)
Background:
Since the adoption of UN Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women,
Peace and Security, DPKO has made some positive strides towards
the incorporation of gender perspectives in peacekeeping operations.
Nevertheless, there is still significant work to be done, particularly
in terms of equipping staff with the conceptual and practical knowledge
and tools to fully integrate gender perspectives into their peacekeeping
functions.
In 2004, the Security Council requested that all UN entities develop
action plans for the implementation of Resolution 1325, and to present
a UN System-wide Action Plan to the Council in October 2005. This
request was also echoed by the Special Committee on Peacekeeping
in February 2005.The recently-adopted gender policy statement of
DPKO’s Under-Secretary General underlines the development
of an Action Plan as one of the important components of the Department’s
overall programme strategy for mainstreaming gender in peacekeeping
operations.
Objective:
The Action Plan will outline a detailed work programme for individual
Offices of DPKO, which will be consolidated into a Department-wide
programme, with clear objectives, activities, goals and targets
for mainstreaming gender in all functional areas of peacekeeping,
in accordance with the provisions of SCR 1325.
Progress to date:
Under the coordination of DPKO’s Gender Advisor, and in collaboration
with the Office of Human Resources Management (OHRM) and the Office
of the Special Advisor on Gender Equality and the Advancement of
Women (OSAGI), the services of three experienced gender consultants
have been contracted to facilitate the process for designing the
Action Plan.
In May 2005, initial discussions between DPKO’s Gender Advisor
and the different Offices of the Department were undertaken in order
to review the overall programme objectives, and the process and
criteria for the selection of staff who would participate in this
process. It was concluded that staff from all functions and all
levels, including senior management, will participate in the workshops.
On June 23rd, the USG’s Gender Policy Statement was formally
presented by the Gender Advisor to DPKO staff in a Town Hall meeting.
Recently, a week-long needs-assessment process was undertaken, during
which the 3 consultants selected to work with the Gender Advisor
met with DPKO staff individually and in groups. The needs assessment
served as an opportunity for the consultants to review the gender
dimension of DPKO’s work, as well as to identify resources
and information that will best support staff efforts to integrate
the mandate of SCR1325 into their work.
Next Steps:
This autumn will see the organisation of five 2-day workshops for
staff of the Department, which will be designed to respond to the
gaps identified through the needs assessment phase, and tailored
to the specific functions and needs of each Office. A pilot workshop
will be held in advance of the five workshops in order to fine-tune
the content and the structure of the subsequent workshops. As an
outcome of the workshops, each office will elaborate a work plan
for implementation of SCR 1325, which will feed into the broader
Action Plan.
Outcomes:
The work plans of each individual office will be consolidated and
finalized into a Departmental Action Plan. The implementation and
follow up of the Action Plan will be closely monitored and evaluated
by the Department’s Gender Unit. The individual office’s
efforts to reach the goals and targets set forth in the Action Plan,
will be monitored and evaluated as part of the regular follow up
and reporting on SCR 1325.
For more information, contact Comfort Lamptey at:
Tel: 917.367.5101
Email: lampteyc@un.org
This overview is also available at: http://www.peacewomen.org/resources/Peacekeeping/DPKO1325ActionPlanoverview.doc
For more information about the gender advisory capacity in DPKO,
visit: http://pbpu.unlb.org/pbpu/genderadv.aspx
For PeaceWomen’s Gender and Peacekeeping Index, CLICK
HERE.
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Call for Candidates for October 2005 Advocacy
on Women, Peace and Security at UN Headquarters
October 2005 marks the five-year anniversary of the adoption of
Security Council resolution 1325 (SCR 1325) on women, peace and
security.
The NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security is calling for
candidates who have been actively working on SCR 1325 and related
women, peace and security issues, in areas affected by violent conflict,
to participate in our October Advocacy Program at United Nations
Headquarters in New York.
The objective of the October Advocacy Program is to ensure that
women’s experiences and concerns in areas affected by violent
conflict are heard at UN Headquarters. Advocates will develop concrete
recommendations on issues of women, peace and security for the work
of the Security Council, UN Agencies, Member States and civil society.
These recommendations will be communicated to audiences at strategic
events, panels, and meetings at UN Headquarters.
The October Advocacy Program will run approximately 10-12 days (estimated
time frame: 18 October-1 November). Selected participants will be
provided with travel, accommodation and a per diem stipend for the
duration of the program.
Criteria for Candidates
Involved in work relating to women, peace and security in
areas of violent conflict, post-conflict or areas where there is
escalating violence and/or militarization.
Have used SCR 1325 or its provisions in work at the local,
national or regional levels.
Experience working with local/grassroots groups, including
women’s organizations.
Experience in public speaking, advocacy and fluency in at
least one of the UN languages.
Available to spend 10-12 days at the end of October in New
York for the program.
We welcome candidacies for this important advocacy program
at UN Headquarters in October.
Please submit a resume and letter of interest to (e-mail or fax
preferred) by 8 August 2005:
Gina Torry
Coordinator
The NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security
777 UN Plaza, 8th Floor
New York, NY 10017
E-mail: NGOWGCoordinator@peacewomen.org
Fax: (+1) 212.682.5354
For the full ‘Call,’ CLICK
HERE.
For the French version of the Candidates Call,
CLICK
HERE.
For the Spanish version of the Candidates Call,
CLICK
HERE.
For more information about the NGOWG, CLICK
HERE.
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International Women’s Commission Established
by Palestinian, Israeli and International Women for a Just and Sustainable
Peace
UNIFEM
28 July 2005
In an energetic effort to work for a genuine negotiation towards
a just and sustainable peace based on a two-state solution, 35 Palestinian,
Israeli and international women leaders and activists met in Istanbul
26-28 July 2005.
The group decided to establish for the first time an International
Women’s Commission to ensure the implementation of the groundbreaking
UN Security Council Resolution 1325 (October, 2000) that calls upon
all state parties to ensure increased representation of women at
all decision-making levels.
“After three intensive days, women were able to overcome differences
and agree upon what I view to be the most effective and substantive
vehicle to bring about the change so urgently needed in the Palestinian-Israeli
conflict,” said Noeleen Heyzer, Executive Director of the
United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM), who convened
and chaired this meeting.
The International Women’s Commission (IWC) will work to guarantee
women’s full participation in formal and informal Israeli-Palestinian
peace negotiations, based upon principles of gender equality, women’s
human rights, international human rights and humanitarian law in
any future resolution of the conflict to bring about an end of the
Israeli occupation and a just and sustainable peace.
The Commission’s work will be guided by a charter of principles
that was developed and adopted at the Istanbul meeting. The goal
of the IWC is to incorporate diverse women’’ perspectives,
voices, and experiences into the peace process, and make sure that
the rights and issues of women affected by the conflict are raised
and effectively addressed including issues dealing with women’s
political, economic, social and cultural rights, and human security.
The group expects to formally launch the Commission in September
2005.
Also available at: http://www.peacewomen.org/resources/OPT/IWC2005.html.
Information about the impact of the conflict on Palestinian women
and on women's peace-building efforts can be found on UNIFEM’s
Web Portal on Women, Peace and Security at: http://www.womenwarpeace.org/opt/opt.htm.
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The 2005 Peace Building Cyberdialogues on
UNSCR 1325: Linking New York, Kampala, Monrovia, Oslo, Dili, Bougainville,
Bangkok and more
Mavic Cabrera-Balleza, Senior Programme Associate, International
Women’s Tribune Center (IWTC)
The International Women’s Tribune Centre, in collaboration
with partner organizations, is planning to convene two, possibly
three cyberdialogues that will bring the voices and views of women
on issues of peace and security to the attention of government officials
at the national and international level.
Drawing upon the experiences of women from different world regions,
a major focus of the cyberdialogues will be women’s efforts
to implement UN Security Council Resolution 1325 and analysis of
the gaps and challenges in the implementation process.
Where and When
The cyberdialogues will take place during the 10th International
Forum convened by the Association of Women’s Rights in Development
(AWID) to be held from October 27-30, 2005 in Bangkok, Thailand.
At this event, which is expected to draw over 2,000 participants—academics,
policymakers, and programme planners—from around the world,
IWTC will host a cyberdialogue, an interactive workshop using Internet
voice chat and/or audio visual teleconferencing to connect women
attending the Bangkok conference with the NGO Working Group on Women,
Peace and Security at UN headquarters in New York and with women
involved in peace building processes in Africa, Asia-Pacific, Middle
East, and Europe.
Screens and speakers will be set up in Bangkok and other cyberdialogue
sites to allow for greater audience participation. At the present
time, 6 to 8 dialogue sites are being considered. If time and facilities
allow, two cyberdialogues will be held during the AWID Forum.
The cyberdialogues will be linked to the UNSCR 1325 October anniversary
activities in New York organized by the NGO Working Group on Women,
Peace and Security. The overall thrust is to provide women working
on peace building issues at the national and community level with
the rare opportunity of engaging in a dialogue with policymakers
working at the international level.
IWTC will work closely with the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace
and Security and other partner organizations to formulate key questions
that will move the discussion forward. The role of women as key
participants in the reconstruction process will be highlighted as
well as issues and obstacles encountered in the implementation of
UN Security Council Resolution (SCR) 1325. Time permitting, attention
may also be directed towards experiences in working with other new
legal mechanisms relevant to women in the post-conflict and reconstruction
process such as the Rome Statue of the International Criminal Court.
The 2005 Peace Building Cyberdialogues will employ a variety of
interactive techniques to engage women at the community and country
level with policymakers and advocacy groups at the international
level. A key feature of the project will be collaboration with community
radio broadcasters in each of the dialogue sites to ensure that
the issues discussed are “re-packaged” for use at local
level and, working with other media practitioners, put in motion
an information multiplier effect.
Using Community Radio to “Ground” 1325 and
Extend the Cyberdialogue Discussion
Community radio broadcasters will play a key role in all phases
of the global-local cyberdialogue experience. In the weeks leading
up to the event, community radio broadcasters in each of the discussion
sites will broadcast a programme explaining the significance of
UNSCR 1325 to women at community level, announce the forthcoming
dialogue (when and where and how to participate), and include some
interactive component to elicit community participation.
During the actual cyberdialogues, the discussions will be recorded
and edited to produce English language radio programmes that will
then be dubbed into local languages and aired in community radio
stations, most of whom are members of the World Association of Community
Radio Broadcasters (AMARC). The radio programmes will ensure wider
outreach for the outcomes of the cyberdialogues and will contribute
to raising awareness of UNSCR 1325 and how women can use this resolution
at community level. The radio programmes produced out of the cyberdialogues
will also be made available in downloadable MP3 format on the websites
of the cyberdialogue partners.
The radio programmes and cyberdialogues are key components of IWTC’s
larger multi-media programme intended to put new legal mechanisms
into the hands of women at country and community level. IWTC is
currently in discussion with partner organizations to explore other
means of capturing and extending discussion of issues raised during
the dialogues beyond the event itself.
For more information, contact Mavic Cabrera-Balleza at: mavic@iwtc.org.
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•
Norway: 2005 TV campaign on Violence Against Women!
Mari Holmboe Ruge, WILPF Norway
Each year in October, the Norwegian Broadcasting Corporation dedicates
one day for a national fundraising campaign to benefit a "good
cause". This year the theme is '"A world without violence
against women". The campaign will focus on four topics: violence
against women during and after armed conflicts; trafficking in women;
female genital mutilation; and violence in the family and other
intimate relationships. In addition to national coverage, all households,
most workplaces and public areas will be visited by volunteers and
asked to contribute to anti-violence projects within the framework
of the campaign theme.
The campaign is being coordinated by FOKUS, Forum for Women and
Development*, a network of women's organisations in Norway that
includes the WILPF Norway national section. The proceeds will finance
women's projects in Africa, Asia, the Middle East, Latin America,
Eastern and Southeastern Europe in their work to combat violence
against women. WILPF Norway has developed three projects in cooperation
with sister sections in Belarus, Lebanon and Colombia which we hope
will receive financial support from the campaign. Emphasis is placed
on women as active peace builders rather than victims needing relief,
in the spirit of SCR 1325.
For more information, consult the campaign web page: http://www.fokuskvinner.no/TV-aksjonen_2005/4205/TV-campaign_20051.pdf
*For more information about FOKUS, visit: http://www.fokuskvinner.no/
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•
Canada: Call to Join Working Group to organize Third Annual
Symposium on Women, Peace and Security
The Canadian Committee on Women, Peace and Security (CCWPS) will
be organizing the Third Annual Symposium on Women, Peace and Security
in advance of the 5th Anniversary of United Nations Security Council
Resolution 1325 in late September/early October, 2005.
If you are interested in participating in the Working Group to set
up the Symposium, please contact Chantale Walker at chantale.walker@international.gc.ca.
Le Comité canadien sur les femmes, la paix et la sécurité
(CCFPS) organisera le Troisième symposium annuel sur les
femmes, la paix et la sécurité avant la cinquième
anniversaire de l'adoption, par le Conseil de sécurité
des Nations Unies, de la résolution 1325, à la fin
de Septembre ou au début d'octobre 2005.
Si vous souhaitez faire partie de la groupe de travail pour contribuer
à l'organisation du symposium, veuillez communiquer avec
Chantale Walker par courriel éléctronique à
chantale.walker@international.gc.ca.
For more information about the Canadian Committee on Women, Peace
and Security, visit: http://www.ccwps-ccfps.org/
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International Law Obligates the US to Uphold
the Rights of Iraqi Women: An Open Letter to the US Ambassador to
Iraq
MADRE
27 July 2005
To the Honorable Ambassador Khalilzad,
MADRE, an international women’s human rights organization,
emphatically supports the call of Iraqi women’s organizations
for the immediate repeal of Article 14 of Iraq’s draft constitution.
As you are aware, Article 14 seeks to replace Iraq's 1959 personal
status laws, which are among the most progressive in the Middle
East, with Sharia, or Islamic law. As such, Article 14 poses a grave
threat to the rights of Iraqi women, to core principles of democratic
governance, and to the primacy of international law. In light of
this danger, we were heartened to hear your comments of July 25,
indicating that the United States will work to guarantee the rights
of Iraqi women.
In fact, the United States, as the occupying power in Iraq, is legally
obligated under the 1907 Hague Convention to ensure the human rights
of Iraq’s civilian population, including the full range of
women’s human rights...
…The United States bears direct responsibility for the current
climate of hostility to Iraqi women’s rights. In 2003, Coalition
Provisional Authority (CPA) chief Paul Bremer personally appointed
reactionary Muslim clerics to the Iraqi Governing Council, empowering
leaders with a stated commitment to restricting women’s rights.
In the period leading up to the election of the National Assembly,
the US also refused to honor a series of demands by Iraqi women’s
organizations, including calls to: create a women’s ministry;
appoint women to the drafting committee of Iraq’s interim
constitution and guarantee that 40 percent of CPA appointees were
women; pass laws codifying women’s rights and criminalizing
domestic violence; and uphold UN Security Council Resolution 1325,
mandating that women be included at all levels of decision-making
in situations of peacemaking and post-war reconstruction...
For the full letter, CLICK
HERE.
For more information about MADRE’s work on this issue, CLICK
HERE.
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• • • • • • • •
•
Women’s participation is a key to lasting peace and
security: Letter to Prime Minister Tony Blair and Secretary of State
for Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs Jack Straw
Kvinna till Kvinna Foundation, Stockholm, Sweden, 8 July 2005
Dear Prime Minister Tony Blair and Secretary of State for Foreign
and Commonwealth Affairs Jack Straw,
Women’s participation is a key to lasting peace and
security – Millennium Review Summit in New York 14-16 September
…In a speech 27 June this year the Secretary of State for
Foreign and Commonwealth Affairs Jack Straw highlighted the UK’s
priorities regarding the UN reform, based on the Report of the High
Level Panel on Threats, Challenges and Change and the report In
Larger Freedom by the UN Secretary General Kofi Annan. Mr Straw
underlined the importance of modernising the UN’s approach
to peace and security. We agree - there is a great and urgent need
for a broadened security doctrine reflecting the true threats men
and women face today.
However the Kvinna till Kvinna Foundation, as women’s organisations
all over the world, criticised both of the reports for being gender
blind. Mr Annan states that development, security and human rights
are inter-connected and he broadens the security concept to include
poverty and environmental issues. This is welcomed, but he fails
to make the connection between security, equality and women’s
human rights. The analyses of threats are still biased towards men.
Still violence against women is seen as a private matter, instead
of it being recognised as a threat against national and international
security, despite the fact that women themselves state that their
physical integrity is a key to their security.
Despite the fact that In Larger Freedom was published just after
Beijing +10 not a single reference is made to the Beijing Platform
for Action or the UNSC Resolution 1325. Not a word is said about
the importance of ensuring women’s participation and that
their knowledge must be recognised in security debates and policies.
This undermines not only women’s human rights but the democratic
system as a whole. The report talks about zero tolerance and codes
of conducts for international personnel which is good, but not enough.
We are now concerned that women’s human rights and security
once again will be sidelined at an international summit. It is all
too common that leaders and politicians only talk about these issues
at “women conferences” and not at other relevant times.
We therefore call on you, representing the UK and the EU, to put
forward the following questions during the summit…
For the full letter, CLICK
HERE.
For more information about the Kvinna till Kvinna Foundation, visit:
http://www.iktk.se/
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Women, Girls and Urban Gun Violence:
A Case Study on Rio de Janeiro
Viva Rio and the Peace Studies Group (Centre for Social Studies)
at the University of Coimbra
Prepared for the Second Biennial Meeting of States on the UN Programme
of Action on Small Arms
14 July2005
…In Rio – a non-war context -- women and girls, too,
are involved in and impacted by gun violence in specific ways, and
a clear understanding of this is a key and necessary element to
reducing urban gun violence in Rio de Janeiro, in Brazil, and internationally.
For example, in studies that sought to understand why young men
and boys want to have or use a gun, a frequent response has been
to "get girls" or to seem more attractive to them, and
to feel manly. On the other hand, Brazilian disarmament campaign
directed at women “Choose Gun Free! Its Your Weapon or Me”
aimed to provide women with information and arguments to convince
men to give up their guns, by de-masculinizing the gun and disassociating
guns with security.
…The objective of this action-oriented research project is
to contribute to a fuller understanding the needs of women and girls
in contexts of armed violence, as well as to the development and
implementation of more effective security policies, gendering the
concept and practices. The project is a partnership between Brazilian
NGO Viva Rio and the Peace Studies Group (Centre for Social Studies)
at the University of Coimbra in Portugal, with partial support from
the Ford Foundation and UNESCO. Between February 2005 and July 2006,
we will gather and analyze theoretical and field data on women and
girls’ roles in armed violence in Rio de Janeiro, as well
as the specific impact this violence has on their lives. At the
same time, we aim to identify women’s ‘individual insecurities’
at the microlevel, making visible the (often silent and marginalized)
impact of armed violence on women.
For the full case study, CLICK
HERE.
For more information, write to the project coordinators: Jessica
Galeria Viva Rio (jessica@vivario.org.br)
and Tatiana Moura, Peace Studies Group at the University of Coimbra
(tatiana@ces.uc.pt).
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs’
Policy on Gender Equality
Released on 27 June 2005
The mission of the UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian
Affairs (OCHA) is to mobilize and coordinate effective and principled
humanitarian action in partnership with national and international
actors in order to alleviate human suffering, advocate for the rights
of all people in need, promote preparedness and prevention and facilitate
sustainable solutions. To accomplish this mission, OCHA is committed
to working towards the goal of gender equality as pervasive gender
inequalities undermine the ability of women and girls to exercise
their rights and be active partners in emergency response, rehabilitation
and development. OCHA’s policy on gender equality does not
seek to duplicate the work of other agencies. OCHA recognizes that
other humanitarian actors also have expertise, policy commitments
and responsibilities in this area. OCHA’s policy on gender
equality
For the full Policy document, CLICK
HERE.
For more information, contact Kate Burns, Senior Humanitarian Affairs
Officer - Gender Adviser in the Policy Development and Studies Branch
of OCHA:
Telephone: 1.917.367.9002
Email: burns@un.org
For more information about OCHA’s work on gender issues, visit:
http://ochaonline.un.org/webpage.asp?Site=gender
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.
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12.
WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY CALENDAR |
Conference: Role of Women in Diaspora in
Peacebuilding and Conflict Resolution
3 September 2005, 2-6pm, Den Haag, The Netherlands
The Multicultural Women Peacemakers Network (MWPN) in the Netherlands
is a forum for diverse groups of women from different backgrounds,
nationalities, religions and cultures but all working for the common
cause of peace building, gender justice and conflict resolution.
These women want to unite their forces in mobilising their strengths
and impacting civil society and in making a difference in the world.
Last year (2004), the Burundi Women for Peace and Development- BWPD
and Vrouwen voor Vrede op de Molukken- VvVM together with the representatives
of MWPN made successful peace trip-visits to Burundi and the Moluccas.
The conference will highlight the trips these women made in their
hometowns and the political, economical and social impact they made
there. The conference’s objectives are the following: To share
experiences and lessons from the two peace trip-visits: Burundi
and Moluccas; To exchange information and ideas on peace building
and conflict resolution; To contribute to the development of the
culture of peace and conflict resolution approaches; and To strengthen
and broaden the network of women peacemakers. For more information,
contact: + 31 (0) 70 3807102.
Gender Democracy and Development: Popular Struggles for
an Alternative World
6-9 September 2005, Tanzania Gender Networking Programme (TGNP),
Dar-es-Salaam, Tanzania
The Gender Festival is organised by the Tanzania Gender Networking
Programme (TGNP) in Collaboration with the Feminist Activism Coalition
(FemAct). This Festival is a collective capacity-building, skills-building
and networking fora for civil society and development actors in
and outside of Tanzania. The main objectives of the festival are
to contribute to public debate on issues relating to gender and
social transformation around the given themes: Alternative Organising/Leadership
Styles in Struggles for a Better, Alternative World; Ideological
and Political Struggle; Struggles Within and/or Outside the System;
and Rights/Entitlements Issues. The official languages of the conference
will be English and Kiswahili. For more information, visit http://www.tgnp.org/0gfadvert.htm
or contact the Tanzania Gender Networking Program at: info@tgnp.org.
For the complete calendar, CLICK
HERE.
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