|
1325
PeaceWomen E-News
Issue
#70
15 November 2005
OCTOBER 2005: 5th anniversary recap & follow-up
(part one)
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. Fifth Anniversary Recap & Follow-Up
(Part One): Highlighting recent events, publications
and updates
2. Feature Report: GAPW &
WILPF Report: Beyond Conflict Prevention: How Women Prevent Violence
and Build Sustainable Peace
3. Feature Statements:
Civil Society Statements to Arria Formula Meeting on Women, Peace
and Security
4. Women, Peace and Security News
5. A Gender and Peacekeeping Update:
Report on Sexual Exploitation and Abuse & News
6. NGO Working Group on Women, Peace &
Security Update: Making Peace work for Women
7. 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.
FIFTH ANNIVERSARY OF RESOLUTION 13252: RECAP & FOLLOW-up
(PART ONE) |
During October a number of events took place to mark the 5th Anniversary
of Resolution 1325. In this first part of our “Recap &
Follow-Up” we highlight some of these events, the publications
that were released as part thereof and the outcomes of some of the
exciting interactive initiatives that took place on-line.
In the second part of this series, to be distributed
on 29 November 2005, the PeaceWomen Team hopes to provide information
on further events, initiatives and publications that took place
and hopes also to provide more in-depth analysis of the Security
Council Open Debate and the Secretary General’s latest report
on the implementation of 1325 (including the Inter-Agency Task Force
on Women, Peace and Security system-wide action plan). .
The focus in this edition is on events that took place at UN Headquarters
in New York and we look forward to receiving from you more information
and feedback on events and initiatives that took place elsewhere.
We would also very much like to receive your views on the Security
Council Open Debate and on the Secretary General’s report
and the system-wide action plan.
Send feedback, information, analysis and comment to 1325news@peacewomen.org
with “Recap & Follow-Up (Part Two) in the subject line.
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
NGO WORKING GROUP ON WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY
– OCTOBER ADVOCACY PROGRAM
The NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security conducted its
October Advocacy Program from 21-28 October 2005. A summary of this
program can be found in the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and
Security Update below. As part of its advocacy program, the NGO
Working Group released a report on the implementation of Resolution
1325 over the past five years (a report highlighted in an earlier
edition of this newsletter).
“From Local to Global – Making Peace Work for
Women: NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security - Five Years
On Report”
The NGO Working Group is pleased to announce the publication of
From Local to Global: Making Peace Work for Women, Security Council
Resolution 1325 - Five Years On. This report provides insight into
the implementation of SCR 1325 at the United Nations level and examines
the progress made by the Security Council in its work as well as
in Open Debates. It examines the key bodies responsible for implementing
the resolution’s provisions – such as the Department
of Peacekeeping Operations. It also takes into consideration how
the lack of directly allocated resources has impeded progress and
implementation.
The report also examines the crucial role of Member States in leading
the way to realizing the provisions of SCR 1325 at the local and
national level. It looks into the process and the creation of National
Action Plans and policies on women, peace and security. It also
presents innovations and strategies used by civil society at the
local, regional and international level to advance the work on women,
peace and security. It considers the power of communication and
advocacy – such as translation campaigns to make SCR 1325
available to local communities, the use of global media such as
community radio and the Internet, as well as initiatives such as
consultations, workshops and peace education.
Above all, this Five Years On Report poses a central question: What
would a world in which the principles enshrined in 1325 look like?
When peace works for women, it provides a crucial component for
creating sustainable peace and development locally and globally.
It is our hope that the readers of this report keep this critical
vision in mind.
For the full report CLICK
HERE
• • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • •
UN SECURITY COUNCIL OPEN DEBATE ON WOMEN,
PEACE AND SECURITY
United Nations Headquarters, New York, 27 October 2005
The Permanent Mission of Romania, which held
the Security Council Presidency during the month of October, organized
this debate that took place on 27 October 2005. All 15 members of
the Security Council, 26 Member States, 3 UN Agencies, 2 intergovernmental
bodies and 2 Civil Society representatives made interventions.
Governmental, UN and Civil Society
Statements:
Security Council Members:
Algeria, Argentina, Benin, Brazil, China, Denmark, France, Greece,
Japan, Philippines, Romania, Tanzania, United Kingdom (on behalf
of EU), United States
Non-Security Council Members:
Australia, Austria, Bangladesh, Canada (for the Human Security Network),
Croatia, Egypt, El Salvador, Fiji, Germany, Guinea, Iceland, Indonesia,
Israel, Italy, Kenya, Liechtenstein, Malaysia, Myanmar, Namibia
(for SADC), Norway, Peru, Samoa, South Africa, Sri Lanka, and Sweden
UN & Civil Society:
Ý Jean-Marie Guéhenno, Under-Secretary-General for Peacekeeping
Operations
Ý Rachel Mayanja , Assistant Secretary-General, Special Adviser
on Gender Issues and Advancement of Women
Ý Noeleen Heyzer, Executive Director - United Nations Development
Fund for Women
Ý Sweeta Noori, Country Director - Women for Women International
Afghanistan
Ý Hélène Dandi Lou, President - Vision et Action des Femmes Africaines
contre les Guerres (VAFAG) (Vision and Action of African Women Against
Wars)
Ý Elsie-Bernadette Onubogu, Gender Adviser of the Commonwealth Secretariat
Ý Anders B. Johnsson, Secretary General of the Inter-Parliamentary
Union
For the full statements CLICK
HERE
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
Thematic compilation of statements at UN
Security Council Open Debate on Women, Peace and Security:
The PeaceWomen Project has compiled excerpts, arranged by theme,
from statements made during the Security Council Open Debate held
on 27 October 2005.
Themes and samples of excerpts featured in
the compilation:
Security Council Mechanism for
Implementation & Integration of UNSCR 1325
Fiji
For five years, the Security Council has been seized with the issue
on "Women, Peace and Security" and now that we have an
Action Plan, we ought to move forward and establish a focal point
and an expert level working youp to ensure the integration of resolution
1325 in the Council's work.
UN System Implementation and Integration
of UNSCR 1325
Tanzania
We are encouraged by the adoption of a system-wide action plan on
the implementation of the resolution. The action plan presents us
with an implementation framework that will allow for co-ordination
and collaboration amongst various UN bodies. It will also provide
us with a monitoring framework upon which to measure the results.
Requisite resources, both financial and human, need to be made available
for the successful implementation of the action plan.
Sri Lanka
....[I]t is essential that the Security Council... request the Secretary
General to update, monitor and review the UN System-wide Action
Plan, on an annual basis
National Implementation Mechanisms
– National Action Plans
Denmark
Denmark believes that national action plans are the first steps
on the way. We urge other member states to systematize their efforts
and develop national action plans to ensure the implementation of
1325. The members of the Security Council could lead the process
and set the example.
As member states, we also have an obligation to implement the resolution
in the best and most effective way. In June the Danish government
launched a National Action Plan for implementation of Security Council
Resolution 1325. It is a firm Danish commitment to implement all
elements of 1325. The Action Plan is a result of fruitful cooperation
between the Ministry of Foreign Affairs and the Ministry of Defense
in Denmark. It outlines a series of political and operational actions
engaging foreign, defense and development cooperation policies.
Each of equal importance for the full implementation of the recommendations
in 1325.
Women’s
Participation in: peace negotiations & agreements, reconstruction
processes, conflict prevention & early warning
Canada (for the Human Security Network)
Women are highly active and effective in informal peace processes.
The challenge lies in their participation in formal processes where
peace agreements are negotiated. There, women have been "frozen
out" of the peace process and left no room at the peace table.
In addition, a further challenge is that
formal peace processes rarely take gender perspectives into account.
The Human Security Network is committed to taking concrete steps
to enhance women's role and integrate gender equality in peace processes
more effectively, thereby strengthening the legitimacy of decision-making
processes and in so doing assisting in laying the groundwork for
a meaningful and sustainable peace for all. The Network maintains
that involvement of all of society at every step, including women
and women's groups, is crucial to the enduring success of the entire
peace process, from negotiation to implementation of a peace agreement.
In order to achieve this, capacity building on gender equality,
women's rights and the gender differentiated experiences of security
is required for all actors, both men and women, as is an active
search for women leaders.
Liechtenstein
Strengthening women's capacity as peacemakers must be pursued in
parallel with increasing women's participation. At the same time,
women need to be encouraged and empowered to hold decision making
positions. Creating awareness of peace negotiations as a tool for
achieving gender equality is essential.
Against this background, Liechtenstein has consistently been advocating
the appointment of women as special representatives and envoys of
the Secretary-General. Such appointments could play a major catalytic
role for the stronger involvement of women in peace processes, especially
when they reach more formal stages. They would also strengthen the
awareness of the need to mainstream gender issues not only into
peace processes but also into other political processes. We are
of the view that the number and consistency of such appointments
should become an essential element for the review of the implementation
of resolution 1325 and part of an overall assessment with regard
to the nomination of women in upper echelons of peacemaking, peacekeeping
and peace-building. At the same time we are aware of the need to
provide the Secretary General with names of potential, well-qualified
candidates for such posts. We therefore invite all interested States
and NGOs to join forces in gathering the necessary information to
make the appointment of women to such posts not only a high priority
but a recurring reality.
Peacebuilding
Commission
United Kingdom (on behalf of EU)
The EU believes that the Peacebuilding Commission should, as part
of its mandate, ensure that women and women's groups are represented
in peace processes, thus enabling them to play an essential role.
Member States and organisations involved in the work of the Peacebuilding
Commission should bear in the mind the desirability of gender balance
in all meetings of the Peacebuilding Commission. National ownership
of any peace process is vital to its success. The UN system is already
doing much to ensure that the local population, and especially,
women are able to play their part in peacebuilding efforts. The
Peacebuilding Commission and the Peacebuilding Support Office should
build on this.
Austria
The creation of a Peacebuilding Commission provides us with a unique
opportunity to ensure the involvement of women in UN-led peacebuilding
processes. The Peacebuilding Commission should ensure, as parts
of its mandate, that women and women’s groups are represented
in peace processes, thus enabling them to play a meaningful role.
Concerning the structure of the Peacebuilding Commission, Member
State and organisations involved in its work should bear in mind
the desirability of gender balance in all meetings of the Peacebuilding
Commission. Austria believes that a Gender Advisor should participate
in all meetings of the Peacebuilding Commission in its country specific
configurations in accordance with para 100 lit. d of the outcome
document of the 2005 Summit.
Gender & Peacekeeping
Norway
Norway has offered to finance a study for the DPKO on lessons learned
and best practices regarding how effective implementation of a gender
perspective can contribute to the success of a peace mission.
...Gender awareness must be recognised as the basis for the successful
design and implementation of all post-conflict work.
...Also important is the notion that incorporating a gender perspective
into peacekeeping operations means ensuring that sex-disaggregated
data are included in the Secretary-General's reports to the Security
Council. This is necessary to understand the reality experienced
in the field by women, men, girls and boys.
South Africa
My delegation also wishes to reiterate its condemnation, in the
strongest terms, of all acts of sexual misconduct by all categories
of personnel in UN Peacekeeping Missions. In this regard, South
Africa welcomes the comprehensive report on sexual exploitation
and abuse by United Nations Peacekeeping Personnel (A/59/710). South
Africa expresses its support to the efforts of the United Nations
to fully implement codes of conduct and disciplinary procedures
to prevent and respond to sexual exploitation and enhance monitoring
and enforcement mechanisms. We note with appreciation, the strategies
and actions included in the System-wide Action Plan to fully implement
those codes of conduct and disciplinary procedures.
Gender Based
Violence: Information & Accountability
United Kingdom (on behalf of EU)
The EU also condemns all violations of the human rights of women
and girls in situations of armed conflict and the use of sexual
exploitation, violence and abuse. The EU urges the complete cessation
by all parties, including UN staff, related personnel and partners,
of such acts with immediate effect. The EU stresses the need to
end impunity for such acts as part of a comprehensive approach to
seeking peace, justice, truth and national reconciliation and to
develop and fully implement codes of conduct and disciplinary procedures.
Sexual and gender based violence affects not only women, but families
and societies as well, and adds to the creation of a culture of
violence. Promoting both the ratification and implementation of
CEDAW, human rights education for boys and girls, and ending impunity
for perpetrators of sexual and gender based violence, will create
a safer and more sustainable environment for women's participation.
Samoa (on behalf of Pacific Islands Forum)
The Security Council must act to protect the most vulnerable. Special
attention must be paid to the specific protection needs of women
and girls to prevent gender-based violence, particularly rape and
other forms of sexual abuse, in situations of armed conflict. Security
Council must call for the prosecution of those who commit crimes
against humanity, genocide and war crimes including those relating
to sexual and other violence against women and girls. There can
be no impunity for such crimes.
Financial Support for Implementation of 1325
OSAGI
The success of the implementation of the [Secretary-General’s
action] plan depends on five factors [including] sufficient resources
to do the job.
Brazil
The report also mentions that it is necessary to increase financial
support for implementation of resolution 1325, including through
extrabudgetary resources.
In Recap & Follow-Up (Part Two) we hope
to provide a more comprehensive analysis of the statements in relation
to these themes and, in particular, to highlight movement from last
year’s debate and to note remaining gaps and challenges, evident
from the statements, in these thematic areas.
For index and links to this thematic compilation CLICK
HERE
Back to TOp
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
Report Of The Un Secretary-General
On The Implementation Of 1325
10 October 2005
The UN Office of the Special Advisor on Gender Issues and Advancement
of Women (OSAGI), in coordination with the Inter-Agency Task Force
on Women, Peace and Security, is coordinating the inputs from the
UN system, Member States and others for the Secretary-General’s
report on implementation of Resolution 1325. In its presidential
statement S/PRST/2004/40, the Security Council requested the Secretary-General
to submit to it, in October 2005, an action plan for the implementation
of resolution 1325 (2000) on women and peace and security across
the United Nations system, with a view to strengthening commitment
and accountability at the highest levels, as well as to allow for
improved accountability, monitoring and reporting on progress on
implementation within the United Nations system.
Including the Inter-Agency Task Force on Women and Peace and Security
system-wide action plan for the implementation of Security Council
resolution 1325 (2000).
For the full report CLICK
HERE
• • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • •
National Action Plans on 1325: Panel
Discussion & Guide
INSTRAW panel, United Nations Headquarters, New York, 26 October
2005
“Securing Equality, Engendering Peace: A Guide To
Planning On Women Peace And Security”
One of today’s greatest challenges is turning policy into
practice in the realm of women’s rights and gender equality,
where the commitments made at the international level have yet to
be fully realized at the ground level. The purpose of this INSTRAW
guide is to help facilitate the development of effective plans of
action on women, peace and security through providing good practices,
specific recommendations and a six-step model process. The guide
is designed as a resource for governments, United Nations and regional
organizations as well as non-governmental organizations (NGOs) who
are interested in, or in the process of, developing plans and policies
on women, peace and security issues.
The full guide CLICK
HERE
• • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • •
Panel Discussion on the Responsibility
to Protect and Security Council Resolution 1325
Canadian Mission to the UN, New York, 26 October 2005
“A Sight for Sore Eyes: Bringing Gender Vision to
the Responsibility to Protect Framework”
This INSTRAW report seeks to highlight the absence of gender perspectives
in current formulations of the doctrine of responsibility to Protect.
This doctrine, which attempts to delineate state responsibility
in times of humanitarian crisis, has gained international prominence
in recent years and received endorsement from World leaders at the
2005 World Summit in September. It affirms that each state has the
primary responsibility to protect its own people, but asserts that
where the perpetration of genocide, ethnic cleansing or crimes against
humanity is imminent or taking place, and the state in question
is unwilling or unable to halt or avert it, the responsibility to
protect shifts to the international community.
The report while noting the increased international salience of
this principle, argues for an incorporation of current issues, experiences
and obligations under the framework of women peace and security
as particularly outlined in Security Council Resolution 1325.
For the full report CLICK
HERE
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
Panel Discussion: Women and Elections
& Launch: Guide to Women’s Participation in Post-Conflict
Elections
DPA/OSAGI, United Nations Headquarters, New York, 25 October
2005
“Women & Elections: Guide To Promoting The Participation
Of Women In Elections”
There is growing recognition that stable peace and national prosperity
can only be achieved when institutions are democratic and representative
of all groups of society. The United Nations’ support for
electoral processes now plays a pivotal role in many peace-keeping
and peace-building activities. Enhancing women’s participation
in electoral processes in post-conflict countries is an integral
part of these efforts. It is also in keeping with the many instruments
and declarations that Member States have adopted to promote the
situation of women worldwide.
The current handbook is intended to provide a quick reference guide
to assist headquarters and field-based actors from the United Nations,
Governments and civil society working to promote greater participation
of women in electoral processes in post-conflict countries. The
handbook found its inspiration in the issues and findings of the
Expert Group meeting held in Glen Cove, NY, in January 2004, organized
jointly by the Office of the Special Advisor on Gender Issues and
Advancement of Women (OSAGI) and the Electoral Assistance Division
of the Department of Political Affairs (EAD), as well as in the
knowledge and experience accumulated by the United Nations in assisting
countries that emerge from conflict. The handbook was prepared by
OSAGI and EAD in consultation with a network of experts from within
and outside the Organisation.
Extract from Forward by Carina Perelli, Director, Electoral Assistance
Division, Department of Political Affairs
For the full report visit: http://www.un.org/womenwatch/osagi/wps/index.html#pub
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
Panel discussion on Gender Mainstreaming in Peacekeeping Operations
DPKO, United Nations Headquarters, New York, 28 October 2005
Convened by the Department of Peacekeeping Operations to discuss
the progress of gender mainstreaming efforts in peacekeeping operations.
This event also marked the launch of the first departmental progress
report on gender mainstreaming in Peacekeeping Operations.
“Gender Mainstreaming In Peacekeeping Operations:
A Progress Report”
This report is the first effort by DPKO to chronicle the progress
and challenges related to gender mainstreaming in peacekeeping operations,
as called for in UNSCR 1325. It seeks to provide an overview of
key policy and operational interventions being supported by gender
units in peacekeeping operations, in functional areas such as DDR.
It also provides profiles of strategies and approaches being used
to implement gender mainstreaming in various peacekeeping missions
around the world, while outlining some of the practical challenges
of gender mainstreaming activities.
For the full report CLICK
HERE
Back to TOp
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
The 2005 Peace Building Cyberdialogues
on UNSCR 1325: Linking New York, Kampala, Monrovia, Oslo, Dili,
Bougainville, Bangkok and more
27 October 2005, The International Women's Tribune Center
As part of the 5th anniversary of United Nations Security Council
resolution (UNSCR) 1325 on women, peace and security, the International
Women's Tribune Centre in collaboration with Isis-WICCE convened
a Peace-Building CyberDialogue on UNSCR 1325. Envisioned as a global
town hall meeting, this 'real time' discussion with voice and web
camera facilities, connected women working on peace-building issues
at the national and community levels with gender advocates, policy
makers and diplomats meeting at the UN as well as with women attending
the Association for Women's Rights in Development (AWID) International
Forum in Bangkok, Thailand.
Women gathered in Nepal, the Philippines, Timor Leste, Uganda and
Zimbabwe as well as in Bangkok, Thailand and New York, USA to discuss
their experiences with using UNSCR 1325, including ways to use the
resolution to strengthen women's participation in key decision-making
bodies that deal with peace and security issues and the issues that
they want to bring to the attention of decision makers. Participants
in New York included Rachel Mayanja, the Special Adviser to the
UN Secretary-General on Gender Issues and Advancement of Women.
Ms. Mayanja noted the women's concerns and suggestions and took
their messages to the Open Debate of the UN Security Council, which
took place immediately following the CyberDialogue.
Peace activists from Burma and the Democratic Republic of Congo
as well as advocates from Canada who came for the UN Security Council
Meeting in New York also joined the peace-building cyberdialogues.
Some of the key points that participants in the cyberdialogues raised
were:
∑ the need to ensure that women understand SCR 1325 and along
with this, their need to be trained to gain skills in negotiation
and in understanding and analyzing conflict - so that they can participate
more effectively in discussions and negotiations on peace and security
issues
∑ the need to educate the general public to develop a broad
constituency of people who are aware of the issues [arising from
conflict and those that bring about conflict] and how these can
impact on their daily lives
∑ and the global policies and instruments that people can
use to address these issuesRachel Mayanja, underscored the need
to demand member states to take action against the use of women's
bodies as battlegrounds during conflict. She said that they are
now requesting more gender trainers and a standardized curriculum
at national and local level and at the international level. 'We
would like to request that the Security Council insists on all member
states to implement SCR 1325 and put in a reporting mechanism',
she added.
The cyberdialogue participants were unanimous in demanding protection
for women from rape and sexual violence, putting an end to impunity
and prosecution for those responsible for rape and other forms of
sexual violence.
They also expressed concern on how to make this resolution more
binding and in holding governments more accountable.
IWTC recorded the conversations during the cyberdialogues. These
will be edited to produce local language radio programs in Africa
and Asia-Pacific that will be aired in local communities, especially
those that are affected by conflict or are in the process of reconstruction.
In many other discussion spaces on UN SCR 1325 it has been pointed
out that it is one thing to translate the SCR 1325 into different
languages, but it must also be ensured that it is accessible in
popular mediums and formats that people could relate to and understand.
IWTC is interested in partnering with organizations who use information,
communication and education to facilitate women's participation
in all levels of policy and decision-making on peace and security
issues.
Mavic Cabrera-Balleza
International Women's Tribune Centre
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
Women making a difference" -
online conversation on UN Resolution 1325
Rosemary Bechler and the 1325 team at openDemocracy
To the UN, from Women Making a Difference
October 28, 2005
Women from around the world are meeting at the UN in New York
to lobby for the full implementation of UN SCR 1325. Our Women Making
a Difference bloggers make their proposals for the UN and EU.
32 women who have fought against violent conflict from Cambodia
to Sierra Leone, have come together in our Women Making a Difference
blog over the last month to ask: How does Security Council Resolution
1325 on women peace and security affect us? Has it made any difference
and what difference could it make? They have been speaking in a
personal capacity, drawing on their personal experience, and that
of organisations to which they belong.
Now, as women delegated from around the world to lobby for the full
implementation of UN SCR 1325 meet in New York, our bloggers are
sending their message to the United Nations and European Union.
There has been consensus on some issues, though not on others, and
a strong desire on all sides to communicate with the wider world.
This message summarises the ideas and concerns they have shared,
and gives a few direct comments from the blog. On the eve of 1325’s
fifth anniversary, we hope it will contribute to a renewal of word
and deed.
For the full version of this article CLICK
HERE
For more on this initiative CLICK
HERE
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
Back to Top
Beyond Conflict Prevention: How Women Prevent Violence and Build
Sustainable Peace
Global Action to Prevent War & Women’s International
League for Peace and Freedom
In honor of the 5th Anniversary of Security Council Resolution 1325,
Global Action to Prevent War and the Women’s International
League for Peace and Freedom have published a book on the role of
women in peacekeeping and conflict prevention. Entitled Beyond Conflict
Prevention: How Women Prevent Violence and Build Sustainable Peace
by Camille Conaway and Anjalina Sen, this book presents the diverse
contributions of women to conflict prevention – as traditionally
defined by global policymakers and framed by the principles of human
security and women’s experiences. The book combines desk-based
research and a series of interviews with women peacebuilders from
around the globe. It is hoped that the presentation of their views,
knowledge, experience and recommendations assists advocacy efforts
to promote women’s participation in conflict prevention.
The book outlines:
∑ Key policies and tools to promote women's role in conflict
prevention and the relevant actors and their activities at the international,
regional, and national level.
∑ Women's contributions to operational conflict prevention,
specifically early warning and response, as well as a discussion
of gender-sensitive indicators of conflict.
∑ Women's activities for structural prevention, framed around
the pillars of post-conflict reconstruction; examples of women's
contributions to human security--extending beyond traditional definitions
of conflict prevention.
∑ The "best practices" and specific strategies to
support and enhance women's efforts in all types and phases of conflict
prevention.
Sample cases in the report:
OPERATIONAL PREVENTION INITIATIVES:
∑ Early Warning: Zimbabwe: Raising Awareness of Escalating
Instability; Fiji: Building Local Capacity for Early Warning
∑ Early Response: Nigeria: Intervening to Facilitate Nonviolent
Solutions
STRUCTURAL PREVENTION INITIATIVES
∑ Negotiating and Maintaining Peace Agreements: Uganda: Negotiating
with Combatants; Armenia And Azerbaijan: People-to-People Peacebuilding
∑ Defining and Promoting "Security": Bouganville:
Partnering with Security Institutions to Prevent Violence; Brazil:
Re-Defining War, Peace and Conflict Prevention
∑ Promoting Human Rights and Good Governance: Angola: Providing
Civic Education for Elections
∑ Enhancing Justice and Reconcilliation: Serbia: Demanding
Justice and Supporting Accountability; Haiti: Seeking Justice, Caring
for Victims of Sexual Violence
∑ Facilitating Sustainable Socio-Economic Development: Sri
Lanka: Integrating Peacebuilding into Tsunami Reconstruction; Zimbabwe:
Transforming Conflict Through Economic Self-Sufficiency for Youth
To Request a hard copy, please mail a check for $10 addressed to
Global Action to Prevent War to:
Global Action to Prevent War
211 East 43rd St., Suite 1204
New York, NY 10017
Please include your mailing address and either an e-mail address
or telephone number for confirmation.
Follow-up:
A round-table discussion of Beyond Conflict Prevention will occur
in mid-November, and will include representatives from various organizations
working on Resolution 1325, experts on women and conflict prevention,
UN mission representatives, and interested individuals. For more
information, please e-mail Waverly de Bruijn at coordinator@globalactionpw.org
For an electronic version of the report CLICK
HERE
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
For NGO and civil society reports, papers and statements, UN and
government reports, and books, journals and articles on women, peace
and security issues, please visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/resources/resourcesindex.html
Back to Top
Arria Formula Meeting on
Women, Peace and Security
United Nations Headquarters, New York, 25 October 2005
On 25 October 2005, the government of Denmark, as a member of the
Security Council, hosted an Arria Formula meeting, an informal,
off-the-record meeting, on women, peace and security in order to
mark the anniversary of UNSC Resolution 1325. Many, although not
all, members of the Council attended the meeting, and there was
significant attendance by Permanent Representatives and Deputy Permanent
Representatives from the Missions.
Extracts From The Statements Of Civil Society Presenters:
The Council heard from the following presenters:
• Goretti Ndacayisaba, Program Executive - Dushirehamwe
(Let’s Reconcile) (Burundi)
We positively appreciate, the efforts of the United Nations through
the work of the gender unit of the United Nations Mission in Burundi
(ONUB), which has greatly helped Burundian women sensitize the government
in the introduction of gender perspectives in the electorate process.
We also would like to salute the contribution of international organizations
and of United Nations agencies that have assisted Burundian women
in the peace negotiation processes and in the organization of elections
that resulted in an effective participation of women in the institutions
from top to bottom. For example we will list organizations such
as: International Alert, TROCARE, UNIFEM, UNDP and UNESCO.
Burundi’s present political situation is marked by progress
in the democratic process and in the reinforcement of good governance
as a result of a successful election process. The country is nonetheless
still very fragile because of the five (5) following challenges
for which I will prescribe recommendations for actions:
…First, I will insist on the persistent insecurity caused
by the National Liberation Front (a combatant group); an insecurity
that is taking bigger proportions and is having damaging effects
on women and children who are always displaced towards refugee’s
territories.
We are asking to the Security Council through ONUB to use all its
power to impose urgent measures against the LNF with the goal of
protecting civilian victims of continuous and aggravating treatments.
The women living in combat zones have direct experiences of NLF
exactions (abuses) and should therefore be at the center of the
cease-fire negotiations.
We propose that women network like ours be consulted to assure that
conflict zones like Bujumbura Rurale can have appropriate (adequate)
representation. These women already have an expertise in conflict
transformation (resolution) Because Burundi Security is largely
contingent upon the regional situation, we propose that the United
Nations apply the recommendations of the Great Lakes Regional Conference
on Peace, Security and Development.
We recommend that the United Nations take the engagement of bringing
necessary resources so that women can develop the National Actions
Plans pertaining to this conference.
For the full statement by Goretti Ndacayisaba CLICK
HERE and click on link
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
• Basma Fahkri, as representative for Hanaa Edwar
(Iraq)
We, as Iraqi women, representing more than 55 percent of the Iraqi
population, want to make it clear that our demand of more guarantees
for women in the constitution does not concern only women's rights,
it concerns the adherence to the rule of law and the creation of
a true democracy in which all people’s voices are represented,
it concerns the preservation of Iraqi unity.
We therefore record our reservation to the constitution because
the bulk of the document is aimed at weakening state power and laws
and will instead benefit religious, sectarian, tribal and regional
establishments. Hence it will consolidate stereotypical images of
women and will subordinate universal human and woman’s rights.
The new constitution is deceptive in asserting that its human rights
provisions are "guarantees" – since the actual status
of basic rights is left to future decisions by Sharia judges, who
may decide that it conflicts with their version of Islam and so
are null and void.
….The Security Council has a crucial role to play in helping
us (Iraqi women's movement) in promoting the rule of law by enforcing
and upholding Iraq’s obligations under international law and
specifically Resolutions 1325 and 1546.
For the full statement by Basma Fahkri CLICK
HERE and click on link
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
• Vina Nadjibulla, Representative - NGO Working Group
on Women, Peace and Security
….I will limit my comments today to three specific points
regarding the UN and national implementation of the resolution and
women’s participation in peacebuilding processes.
• First, in order to ensure the integration of resolution
1325 into its ongoing work, we recommend that the Security Council
establish a focal point and an expert level working group on women,
peace and security.
• Second, we urge Member States to develop national strategies
and action plans for the coordinated integration of women, peace
and security issues at the national level.
• And third, we stress that women and a gender perspective
should be included in all peacebuilding processes and institutions
including in the Peacebuilding Commission and the Peacebuilding
Support Office.
……While resolution 1325 can advance gender mainstreaming
in the United Nations, Member States also play a critical role in
implementing the resolution by incorporating policy on women, peace
and security at the national level. Even though the 2004 Presidential
Statement on women, peace and security called for the development
of National Action Plans, to date only six Member States have begun
work on such action plans. The Working Group urges Member States
to develop adequately funded national action plans and strategies
on women, peace and security based on consultations with civil society
organizations, and with specific time-bound targets, monitoring
and reporting mechanism.
For the full statement by Vina Nadjibulla, CLICK
HERE and click on link
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
For full statements from the Arria Meeting CLICK
HERE
Back to TOP
4.
WOMEN,
PEACE AND SECURITY NEWS |
AFRICA
FINALLY GETS FIRST FEMALE PRESIDENT AS DEFEATED SOCCER TSAR CALLS
FOR PEACE
November 15, 2005 - (IRIN) Africa won its first
female president on Tuesday when counting ended in Liberia’s
historic presidential poll, with former World Bank economist Ellen
Johnson-Sirleaf garnering 59.4 percent against former soccer star
George Weah. "Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf has received 4778,526 votes
corresponding to 59.4 percent and George Weah has received 327,046
votes corresponding to 40.6 percent,” said the head of the
election commission, Frances Johnson-Morris.
SECURITY COUNCIL URGES PROTECTING WOMEN IN WAR, EMPOWERING THEM
AS PEACEMAKERS
October 27, 2005 - (UN News): Five years after
adopting a resolution on protecting women who are victims of war
and helping them play a greater role as peacemakers, the United
Nations Security Council today stressed the importance of accelerating
implementation of the landmark measure.
WOMEN
DESIGN NEW NATIONAL FRAMEWORK ON GENDER BASED VIOLENCE
October 25, 2005 – (The Analyst) Women
in Liberia are presently engaged in sharing experiences on sexually
gender-based violence intended to afford them the opportunity to
develop a national framework on gender protection.
MYANMAR'S
AUNG SAN SUU KYI IN DETENTION 10 YEARS: ACTIVISTS
October 24, 2005 – (BurmaNet) Myanmar's
pro-democracy icon Aung San Suu Kyi on Monday marked what her supporters
said is a total of 10 years in detention, as campaigners overseas
pushed the United Nations to take strong action.
WOMEN
AGREE NEW AREAS FOR ACTION
November 14, 2005 - (IPS): Experts have
agreed new areas for "aid architecture" to promote gender
equality and women's rights. Five steps -- political space, participation,
a secure knowledge base, accountability, and the simplification
of key issues -- are essential so women's rights are not lost in
growing development cooperation, experts agreed at a United Nations
Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) conference here last week.
For
more country-specific women, peace and security news, CLICK
HERE
For
more international women, peace and security news, CLICK
HERE
Back to To
5.A
GENDER AND PEACEKEEPING UPDATE |
REPORT ON SEXUAL EXPLOITATION AND ABUSE
& NEWS
Panel Discussion and Launch Of Refugees
International Report On Sexual Exploitation And Abuse In UN Peacekeeping
October 18, 2005
On October 18 2005, the Permanent Mission of Tanzania to the UN
and Refugees International, hosted a panel discussion on the issue
of sexual exploitation and abuse by UN peacekeepers. The event also
marked the launch of a Refugee International report on Sexual Exploitation
and Abuse in UN Peacekeeping Missions.
The Panelists included His Royal Highness Prince Zeid Ra’ad
Zeid al-Hussein, Permanenst Representative of the Jordanian Mission
to the UN and author of the report, "A comprehensive strategy
to eliminate future sexual exploitation and abuse in UN peacekeeping
operations." Also speaking were Anna Shotton, Focal Point on
Sexual Exploitation and Abuse, UN Department of Peacekeeping Operations
and Sarah Martin of Refugees International. The event was moderated
by H.E. Mr. Augustine Mahiga of Tanzania, Permanent Representative
to the Mission of the United Republic of Tanzania to the UN
To view the Refugees International Report "Must Boys Be Boys?
Ending Sexual Exploitation and Abuse in UN Peacekeeping Missions"
CLICK
HERE
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
SECRETARY-GENERAL
NAMES TEAM OF EXPERTS TO STUDY BEST WAYS TO ENSURE ACCOUNTABILITY
OF UN PEACEKEEPERS
October 24, 2005 (UN Press Release) United Nations Secretary-General
Kofi Annan has appointed a group of legal experts to conduct a study
on the best ways to ensure that United Nations staff members and
experts on mission who serve in peacekeeping operations and who
commit crimes during their peacekeeping assignments can be held
criminally accountable in a manner consistent with due process of
law.
UN
PEACEKEEPING CHIEF URGES STATES TO POLICE THEIR TROOPS AGAINST SEX
ABUSE
October 21, 2005- (UN News Service): Pledging further action to
root out sexual abuse by peacekeepers, a senior United Nations official
has urged countries contributing troops to the world body's operations
to do their part to end the scourge.
REPORT
FINDS U.N. ISN'T MOVING TO END SEX ABUSE BY PEACEKEEPERS
October 18, 2005 (New York Times) - The United Nations has developed
procedures to curb sexual abuse by peacekeepers, but the measures
are not being put into force because of a deep-seated culture of
tolerating sexual exploitation, an independent review reported Tuesday.
For PeaceWomen’s Peacekeeping Watch index CLICK
HERE
For more gender and peacekeeping news CLICK
HERE
Back to TOp
MAKING PEACE WORK FOR WOMEN:
SCR 1325 FIFTH YEAR ANNIVERSARY
New York, October 17-28, 2005
Iraq, Afghanistan, Burma, Burundi, Côte d’Ivoire,
Colombia…NO Women. NO Peace.
To mark the 5th anniversary of Security Council Resolution 1325
on Women, Peace and Security, the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace
and Security brought six leading international peacemakers to United
Nations Headquarters in New York. These six women peacebuilders
met and spoke with senior UN officials, government representatives,
and civil society leaders, as well as international press, on ways
to fully involve women in peace and security decision-making in
their countries.
On October 25th the Permanent Mission of Denmark to the United Nations
hosted an Arria-style Security Council meeting. Four civil society
representatives were able to engage in a constructive dialogue with
the Council members on ways to better integrate the provisions of
SCR 1325 in the daily work of the Security Council.
On October 27th the Security Council, under the Presidency of Romania,
held an Open Debate on the role of women in peacemaking and peacebuilding.
Two civil society representatives—Sweeta Noori from Afghanistan
and Helen Dandi from Cote d’Ivoire—addressed the Council
on the implementation of SCR 1325 in their countries.
The NGO Working Group in partnership with women peace advocates
from around the world called on the Security Council and governments
to:
1. Develop national policies to ensure women’s equal participation
in peace and security decision-making
2. Ensure women’s equal participation and integration of women’s
concerns in the work of the Peacebuilding Commission
3. End impunity for gender-based violence and protect women’s
human rights
In addition, the NGOWG and the six women peacemakers organized and
participated in a number of panels during the week, including a
panel on the Responsibility to Protect and Security Council Resolution
1325, on National Implementation of SCR 1325, and on the Role of
Women in National Elections.
In collaboration with the Department of Public Information, NGOWG
organized 26 interviews and press events.
For the schedule of events and in-depth information
CLICK
HERE
For more information about the NGOWG, CLICK
HERE.
Back to TOP
7.
WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY CALENDAR |
Seminar: Human Trafficking and Peacekeeping
Operations: Research Findings and Legislative Responses
17 November 2005, 10:30am - 12:00pm, Washington, DC
Refugees International, Russia & Eurasia Program of Center for
Strategic and International Studies.
When peacekeepers commit or facilitate human rights abuses, they
prolong deployments and undermine missions. The panel discussion
will focus on the issue of sexual exploitation and abuse, particularly
human trafficking in peacekeeping operations. We will explore ways
that U.S. policy can be changed to end human trafficking in peacekeeping
missions around the world.
B1C Conference Room
1800 K St. NW
RSVP to Alina Tourkova:
Tel: 202.775.3259
Fax: 202.775.3199
Email: atourkova@csis.org
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
Training: Gender, Development and Participatory
Governance
14 November - 2 December 2005, Amsterdam, The Netherlands
The Royal Tropical Institute (KIT)
For further details on course contents, entrance requirements and
registration, please visit the course website
http://www.kit.nl/development/html/gdpg.asp or write to: gender@kit.nl
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
Global Women’s Court of Accountability
November 17 – 18 2005, San Diego, California
Joan B Kroc Institute for Peace & Justice, University of San
Diego
The Global Women's Court of Accountability will be a Public Hearing
on Gross Violations of Women’s Human Rights during Conflict
and the Power of International Instruments to address these Gender-based
Crimes. The Court of Accountability hopes to examine the urgency
and reality of what happens to women in conflict and postconflict
situations and the power and use of the instruments and laws designed
to protect them. It is anticipated this public hearing format will
encourage greater public understanding and support for the inclusion
of women in access to and construction of appropriate opportunities
to gain a just peace and engage in rehabilitation.
For more information on this event, please visit: http://peace.sandiego.edu/programs/GlobalWomensCourtPg.html
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence
November 25 - December 10 2005
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 (CWGL) in
1991. Participants chose the dates, November 25, International Day
Against Violence Against Women and December 10, International Human
Rights Day, in order to symbolically link violence against women
and human rights and to emphasize that such violence is a violation
of human rights.
For more information on this year's theme, events and activities,
please visit: www.cwgl.rutgers.edu/16days/about.html
For the complete calendar, CLICK
HERE.
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.
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.
Back to Top
|