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1325
PeaceWomen E-News
Issue
#72
13 December 2005
FOCUS ON AFRICA
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. Women, Peace and Security News
2. 1325 Translation Update:
Yoruba Translation Now Available
3. Feature Statement:
Women in Law and Development in Africa: Statement on the Protocol
to the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights relating
to Women’s Rights in Africa
4. Feature Events: Angola:
UNDP Gender Development Workshop & DRC: Gender Sensitive Electoral
Law Campaign
5. Feature Resources:
Forced Migration Review: Sudan: Prospects of Peace & Publication
on Increasing Participation of Adolescent Girls
6. Feature Initiatives:
World Social Forum participation opportunities, SADC Gender
Campaign & 88 Days Campaign
7. Gender & Peacekeeping Update:
Q&A – African Peacekeeping Operations
8. 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.
Due to the upcoming holiday season, this is the
last issue of 1325 PeaceWomen E-News before the New Year. The next
issue will be circulated in mid-January 2006. We wish all of our
subscribers a peaceful and joyous New Year.
1.
WOMEN,
PEACE AND SECURITY NEWS |
UGANDAN
POLICE UNDERGO SPECIAL TRAINING ON ELIMINATING VIOLENCE AGAINST
WOMEN
November 30, 2005 - (UNHCR) As a Ugandan police detective,
Gladys Friday has taken reports of "painful cases of violence"
against women almost every day, but she was never sure how best
to help the victims. Now, after undergoing special training sponsored
by the UN refugee agency to encourage Uganda's police to eliminate
violence against women, Detective Friday says: "I feel I am
together with the women and girls in fighting violence against them.
I will no longer disregard them as refugees but I will fight to
protect them. I am now closer [to refugee women] and will better
handle cases of sexual and gender-based violence."
DRC
POLITICAL PARTY LEADERS AGREE TO MAINSTREAMING GENDER EQUALITY PRINCIPLES
December 3, 2005 - (UNIFEM) Kinshasa - In a one day information
exchange and training on the core principles of gender equality,
250 political party leaders in the DRC have agreed to mainstream
gender equality principles in their political party manifestos,
activities, protocols and procedures.
DARFUR
WOMEN FIGHTERS NEGOTIATE FOR FIRST TIME
December 2, 2005 - (Reuters) Darfuri rebel commander
Mariam Abdallah saw her husband murdered in front of her and took
to arms dealing to look after the 15 children in her care before
joining a revolt to fight the government she says is racist.
SOUTH
AFRICA: FREE WOMEN, CHILDREN FROM ABUSE TO ATTAIN GLOBAL PEACE
November 29, 2005 – (BuaNews) The world is far
off from the goal of achieving global peace and security if women
and children are still being subjected to abuse, says Foreign Affairs
Deputy Minister Sue van der Merwe.
KENYA:
KAARI BETTY MURUNGI: PIONEERING KENYA PEACE ADVOCATE
December 1 2005 - (Urgent Action Fund) Hon. Wangari Maathai blazed
the trail for African and Kenyan women in regard to international
recognition for peace activism. Betty Kaari Murungi has now followed
in those footsteps. On November 11th 2005, in New York, Betty received
the annual International Advocate for Peace Award which honours
individuals who embody passion through their work in international
conflict resolution.
UN
TOLD NOT TO WATER DOWN PROTECTION OF CIVILIANS
December 9, 2005 - (Reuters) - The U.N. relief coordinator urged
the Security Council on Friday not to water down its resolution
on protecting civilians subject to abuse, whether in Northern Uganda,
Sudan or the Ivory Coast. The 15-member council, in an all-day debate
among dozens of U.N. ambassadors, is considering a document on how
to stop atrocities against women, men and children in war zones.
"The eyes and ears of the world community and human rights
and humanitarian workers are on you," Jan Egeland, the humanitarian
relief coordinator, told the council, citing the 26 million people
forced out of their homes."This is not the time to end up with
a weak resolution on the protection of civilians," he said.
"It would be the ultimate irony when faced with the mass of
information of tens of thousands of deaths, and tens of thousands
of rapes, and tens of thousands of children being abused."
U.N.:
GENDER EQUALITY STARTS AT THE TOP
December 9, 2005 - (IPS) A leading international women's
rights group has launched a campaign calling on the U.N. Security
Council to consider a woman candidate for the post of the next secretary-general.
With Kofi Annan's tenure as U.N. secretary-general ending next year,
Equality Now drew up a list with the names of highly-qualified women
leaders who should be considered for the position. "The question
is not whether or not women will do a 'better job' at the helm the
of U.N., the question is why, since the founding of the U.N. 60
years ago, has a woman never been selected -- or at least publicly
considered -- to serve as secretary-general, despite the fact that
there are many qualified candidates and despite the promises made
by governments to reach gender equality within the U.N.?"
GENDER
AND POLITICS IN LIBERIA: A NOT-SO-SIMPLE CORRELATION
December 5, 2005 (Amsterdam News) – The recent election in
Liberia is momentous in more ways than one. Most remarkable is the
fact that the election itself took place at all in the wake of a
long and bloody civil war. Equally significant is the emergence
of Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf as the victorious candidate and thus, the
first elected African female president. We must congratulate Mama
Ellen on her victory and learn from her perseverance given the fact
that this was not the first time she contested elections. For me,
the salience of this historic event is the fact that Liberian presidency
is no longer out of bounds for women, or to use the language of
Nigerian political discourse, the Liberian presidency is no longer
a no-go area for women.
WHAT
NEXT FOR KENYAN WOMEN?
December 2, 2005 - (AWID Resource Net) On November 21,
2005, after a five-year constitutional review process, Kenya held
a referendum to approve or reject a draft constitution. Sixty-seven
percent of the voters rejected the draft. AWID interviewed Winnie
Guchu, a Nairobi based women's rights activist and consultant, about
the country's constitutional review process and what it has meant
for women's rights.
RWANDA:
SURVIVORS FUND CALLS ON INTERNATIONAL COMMUNITY TO DO MORE TO PREVENT
USE OF SEXUAL VIOLENCE AS WEAPON OF WAR
November 25, 2005 – (Pambazuka News) British-based charity
Survivors Fund (SURF), which represents and supports survivors of
the Rwandan genocide, called on the international community to do
more to prevent the use of sexual violence as a weapon of war to
mark today’s UN International Day for the Elimination of Violence
against Women.
WOMEN
DECRY IMPUNITY FOR RAPE IN DARFUR
November 17, 2005 - (Reuters) A culture of impunity for
rape in Sudan's Darfur region means women like Mariam, assaulted
and left for dead, say they don't even bother to report the attacks
to police, aid workers and officials said. Mariam, who was too afraid
to give her full name because she was worried about reprisals for
discussing the taboo subject, says women are most at risk when they
leave the refugee camps that house around 2 million mostly women
and children.
AFRICAN
WOMEN REBELS GET CRASH COURSE IN HUMAN RIGHTS
November 28, 2005 – (AFP)
Current and former female rebels from guerrilla armies across Africa
have just met in Ethiopia for an unusual course on human rights
aimed a promoting women's empowerment during conflict and post-war
situations. About 35 female active and ex-members of rebel groups
from Angola, Burundi, the Democratic Republic of Congo, Liberia,
Mozambique, Rwanda, Sierra Leone, Somalia, South Africa, Sudan,
Uganda and Zimbabwe gathered at African Union (AU) headquarters
for the unprecedented week-long conference, officials said.
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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| 2.
1325 TRANSLATION UPDATE: YORUBA TRANSLATION NOW AVAILABLE |
TOTAL NUMBER OF AVAILABLE TRANSLATIONS: 71
PeaceWomen recently received a Yoruba
translation.
Yoruba is the language of the largest ethnic group in Nigeria. It
is spoken by about 30 million people, mainly in southwestern Nigeria,
but also in Benin, Togo and Sierra Leone.
The Yoruba translation was completed by Oluseye
Adesola, Lecturer, African Languages Program, Yale University
Yoruba is among the languages identified as a priority for translation
by women, peace and security advocates. Other African languages
currently on this priority list are:
• Bari (Sudan)
• Dinka (Sudan)
• Igbo (Nigeria)
• Luganda (Uganda)
• Luo (Northern Uganda, Western Kenya)
• Nuer (Sudan)
• Oshiwambo (Namibia)
• Sangho (Central African Republic)
• Shilook (Sudan)
• Xhosa (S. Africa)
• Zande (Sudan)
• Zulu (S. Africa)
If you know of existing translations of 1325 in
any of the above languages, please contact milkah@peacewomen.org
To suggest potential translators for any of these
languages, and to add languages to this list, please contact milkah@peacewomen.org
To view the 71 translations, click
here
For information about the translators, click
here
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Extracts of Statement on the Protocol to
the African Charter on Human and People’s Rights relating
to Women’s Rights in Africa
Women in Law and Development in Africa (WILDAF)
Femmes, Droit et Dévelopment en Afrique (FEDDAF)
25 November, 2005
This 25 November, 2005, the Protocol
to the African Charter on Human and Peoples’ Rights relating
to Women's Rights in Africa enters into force.
It is with a great delight that
we celebrate the event, which marks a significant turning point
in the history of African women’s struggle for the recognition
and the respect of their basic human rights. From this 25 November,
2005, date that we wish to engrave in gold lettering in the history
of our continent, this instrument likely to do justice to women
and girls of the continent will apply from now on.
On this occasion, WiLDAF would like to pay a deserved tribute to
all women wherever that they are, and to women's rights activists
in general, for the work, the support, courage and perseverance
they showed during these last ten (10) years so that the protocol
relating to women's rights has today legal existence and has force
of law.
WiLDAF salutes those States that
have ratified the protocol and in which the instrument can thus
be applied. These are: Benin, Cape Verde, Comoros, Djibouti, The
Gambia, Libya, Lesotho, Mali, Malawi, Namibia, Nigeria, Rwanda,
South Africa, Senegal and Togo.
Why the protocol is so important?
For African women, the entry into force of the protocol is an essential
stage towards the recognition of rights whose daily violations cause
huge sufferings. The protocol provides, as the Convention on the
Elimination of all forms of Discrimination against Women (CEDAW),
a reference legal framework enabling various stakeholders and populations
to daily work towards the respect of women's rights.
But more than the CEDAW, the legal
framework of the protocol is the reflection of the specific violations
against African women. The preamble justifies the adoption of the
protocol by the maintenance of discrimination against women and
harmful traditional practices, and this despite the commitments
made by States on international and regional levels. It also expresses
in a solemn manner the accession of leaders to the principle of
gender equality.
Beyond these declarations, the protocol
will allow, through its provisions, for addressing as crucial issues
as the multi-sided violations of rights in marriage, violence, serious
attacks to life, physical and moral integrity to women and girls
security, of which no one can deny the telling reality in our societies.
While its entry into force coincides with the launching of the 16
days activism on violence against women, it is necessary to outline
the particular place that the protocol as legal framework and tool
must occupy from now on for the fight against gender violence in
Africa. The entry into force of the protocol provides an irreplaceable
framework to put an end to violations of which women and children,
particularly girls, are victims in period of conflict, as civilians,
refugees or soldiers, and to take up the challenge of peace in Africa,
indispensable condition for development. The struggle against traditional
practices harmful to the health of women and girls has to be backed
by the protocol, which provides guidelines for their elimination.
The economic and social rights, also vital as the right to health,
including reproductive health, the right to education and the rights
to succession of widows and girls, which are daily scorned by ignorance
or intentionally, would be better protected if the actions taken
could be built on adequate measures like those recommended by the
protocol. Ultimately, there is no doubt that in the interest of
hundreds of thousands of women and girls in Africa, the protocol
relating to women's rights will provide a priceless support to the
work of women’s rights organisations in the daily fight for
a fairer world.
Finally, the entry into force will
enhance the credibility of AU, which showed its commitment to promote
women’s participation and gender equality, particularly parity
within the AU Commission and equitable representation of Judges
at the African Court of Humans and Peoples’ Rights in order
to show consistency and constancy.
The entry into force of the protocol
marks, all things considered, a decisive stage towards the rooting
of a culture of respect and exercise of women’s human rights
in African societies. We are conscious that the work must be pursued
so that the protocol experiences a full application and that it
truly serves for the protection of women's rights on the continent.
We therefore commit ourselves to pursue the mobilisation at all
levels. From now on, our work will aim at ensuring that all the
53 African States ratify the protocol, that legislative reforms
start, that the provisions of the protocol apply in our courts and
finally that the settlement of any dispute involving a woman is
based on the provisions of the protocol in order to do justice.
Then, we call on those countries,
which did not ratify to date the protocol, to do it without delay
and reservation so that all women of the continent can effectively
profit from this instrument likely to encourage their full development
and participation in a sustainable development
We urge Burkina Faso, Guinea, Mauritania,
and Zambia which have already caused their Parliament to adopt the
law authorising the ratification of the protocol to take all actions
to submit with the African Union Commission the instrument of ratification.
We call on those States who have
ratified the protocol with reservations to withdraw these reservations.
We invite all the stakeholders who
worked so far and others who will want to join us to do every thing
possible to provide women’s rights and human rights organisations
in general, with capacities necessary so that they can monitor and
evaluate the implementation of the protocol.
Finally we want to seize the opportunity
to welcome the election of Mrs. Ellen Johnson-Sirleaf as President
of Liberia. This election is of good sign for the application of
the provisions of the protocol, particularly its Article 9.1a which
states that women shall take part in all elections without any discrimination.
WOMEN IN LAW AND DEVELOPMENT IN
AFRICA (WiLDAF)
FEMMES, DROIT ET DÉVELOPPEMENT EN AFRIQUE (FeDDAF)
WEST AFRICA SUB-REGIONAL OFFICE / BUREAU SOUS-RÉGIONAL –
AFRIQUE DE L’OUEST
B.P. 7755, Lomé, Togo – Téléphone (228)
222 26 79 - Fax (228) 222 73 90
Email : info@wildaf-ao.org - Site : www.wildaf-ao.org
For the full statement Click
here
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Malanje: UNDP Runs Gender, Development Workshop
December 8, 2005 – (Angola Press Agency) A workshop on gender
and development opened Thursday in Angola's northern Malanje province
under the UN Development Programme (UNDP), as part of Government
strategy on women participation in decision making organs.
The information was released by the event facilitator,
Idalinda Rodrigues, with UNDP, who added that the meeting will last
for two days and aims at contributing to the development and women
participation in the process of local development and decision making.
The event is also intended to publicise the Government's
local gender strategy on the resolutions from the Southern Africa
Development Programme (SADC) and Beijing, the source said.
The event is discussing such topics as gender and
history of socialisation, identification of the gender matters in
the development and introduction of the model of gender analysis.
The practices of gender analysis model, planning
of activity related to gender, personal evaluation of the work and
planning on the next workshop are also being tackled at the meeting.
The workshop is being attended by representatives
of provincial department of education, health, family and woman
promotion, social communication and members of the provincial government.
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200512090130.html
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Over 20000
People Reached by Successful Advocacy Campaign on a Gender Sensitive
Electoral Law in the Democratic Republic of Congo
UNIFEM, November 25, 2005
A two weeks high level advocacy campaign to promote equal access
of women and men to electoral mandates and electoral offices has
concluded in Kinshasa, the capital of the Democratic Republic of
Congo. The campaign was organized by different women networks and
organizations, working together under a ‘Coalition for Gender
Equality’ and supported by the United Nations Development
Fund for Women (UNIFEM), in partnership with the United Nations
Development Programme (UNDP), MONUC, the Independent Electoral Commission
and the Ministry of Women and Family Affairs. The campaign received
the endorsement of numerous government leaders including the personal
representative of the President and Head of State, Yerodia Abdoulaye
Ndombassi, Vice President in charge of the Commission of Reconstruction
and Development, welcome and encouraged by the Vice President in
charge of the Commission of Politics, Defence and Security as well
as the Vice President in charge of Socio-Cultural issues.
The campaign was organized less
than two months before the upcoming parliamentary debate on the
draft electoral law that would guide elections and the holding of
a national referendum on the Constitution. Its main aim was to target
government officials, leaders of political parties, private and
public institutions and civil society networks to call for an electoral
law and constitution that would be gender sensitive and that would
equal opportunities for men and women to claim their civic rights
and participate in their country’s development.
For more on this campaign
CLICK
HERE
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Forced Migration Review: Sudan: Prospects
of Peace
30 November 2005
'Sudan: prospects for peace' offers a wide range of opinion on the
inclusiveness of the peace process, the Comprehensive Peace Agreement's
prospects for success, feasibility of plans to assist the return
of IDPs and refugees and recovery and development strategies. Many
of the 38 authors regret the inability to negotiate peace in Darfur,
the ongoing crisis in Eastern Sudan, exclusion of women from the
peace process and the significant delays in merging the northern
and southern armies and delivering funding pledged by the international
community in Oslo in April.
The Editors express qualified optimism: "If
Sudanese can return home with dignity, if gross inequalities in
distribution of wealth and provision of services can be redressed,
if Sudanese women are given space to contribute to its recovery
and if Sudan can leap up the human development ladder to achieve
the Millennium Development Goals, the Sudanese will have much to
teach other countries emerging from the shadow of war."
Nine thousand copies will be distributed in Sudan
thanks to financial assistance from the US Institute of Peace, UNDP
and UNICEF. The FMR Editors are grateful for logistical assistance
from the Government of National Unity, the Government of Southern
Sudan and the UN.
The full text of articles is now online at: www.fmreview.org/sudan.htm
(English edition) & at www.hijra.org.uk/sudan.htm (Arabic edition).
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New Publication: Increasing
the Participation of Adolescent Girls
For more information, contact: Surendrini Wijeyaratne, Working
Group Co-ordinator Gender and Peacebuilding Working Group Canadian
Peacebuilding Co-ordinating Committee 1 Nicholas St. Suite 1216,
Ottawa, Ontario, CA K1N
7B7 Tel: + 1 613 241 3446; Fax: + 1 613 241 4846 Email: surendrini@peacebuild.ca
Website: http://www.peacebuild.ca
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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
WILPF-US - Call for Participation:
Panel Discussion on UNSCR 1325 at 2006 World Social Forum
WILPF-US in association with LIMPAL will present a panel discussion
on UN Resolution 1325, "Women, Peace and Human Security: United
Nations Resolution 1325" at the Caracas Polycentric World Social
Forum to be held January 24-29, 2006.We welcome participation from
people who are active on UN 1325 to offer their analyses and experiences.
We wish to discuss 1325 and its impact or lack of impact on women
in conflict zones; the feasibility of UNSCR 1325; how is 1325 being
implemented in various conflict zones; what could make 1325 better;
etc. This is a continuation of the dialogue we began during WSF
2005 on 1325 and we hope to be able to assess its effectiveness
to date in several world arenas in order to determine what women
and others have experienced regarding its implementation. Those
who have worked with 1325 and have an interest in participating
on this panel please contact Pat Willis, pwill06@coastalnet.com,
or Laura Roskos, lauraroskos@hotmail.com.
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Journal of International
Women's Studies: Call for Papers
For this special issue of the Journal of International Women's Studies
we are seeking contributions in a range of genres from women who
have direct experience with organizing or attending one or more
of the World Social Forums or regional/local forums organized under
the auspices and according to the principles of the Fórum
Social Mundial.
Submissions might include theoretical
or analytical essays, reflective narratives, activity reports or
evaluations, manifestos, press releases, posters or other ephemera.
JIWS's intention is to collect materials documenting the range of
experiences and activities occurring under the tent of the WSF so
that feminist practice within the Social Forums can gain in effectiveness.
We also believe it is important to begin to archive this activism
as it happens.
Please submit your contribution
to the editors no later than April 30, 2006 following the guidelines
posted on the JIWS's website at: http://www.bridgew.edu/soas/jiws/
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The SADC and Gender 2005
Campaign
Gender Links, Fall 2005
The SADC and Gender 2005 Campaign is a civil society initiative
in partnership with the SADC Gender Unit and the SADC Parliamentary
Forum to raise the current target of women in decision-making from
thirty to fifty percent, and to elevate the SADC Declaration on
Gender and Development to a Protocol.
For more on this initiative please
visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/resources/Governance/governanceindex.html
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Who can change the world...
in 88 days?
Campaign 88 Days is an effort to
raise awareness, take action and mobilise resources for women's
rights worldwide. In the 88 days between December 10, 2005, International
Human Rights Day and March 8 2006, International Women’s Day,
you can help keep women safe from domestic and sexual violence,
guarantee them equal treatment in the work force, push governments
to do what’s right for women, and support groundbreaking initiatives.
Together with you support we can change the world in 88 days.
What can you do?
Share your vision, courage, hope and voice in any – or all
– of these five ways. You will join thousands of women around
the world in the Mama Cash Campaign 88 Days.
Vote for the (she changes the world)-award.
From around the world, six pioneering organizations, supported by
Mama Cash, are nominated. The winner will receive €20.000 from
Mama Cash to help change the world where they live.
Be informed by registering for 8
times Mama Cash e-news with Campaign 88 Days progress reports, ways
to take action, stories of brave and inspiring women who are changing
the world.
Contribute €1 every day for
88 days, or whatever amount is right for you, and help raise €1
million that Mama Cash turns into grants to make the world a better
place for women, men and children. Mama needs cash!
Send an e-card! Send everyone you
know the Campaign 88 Days e-card. Energize your friends, family
and colleagues. Together with you, we can make this campaign known
around the world!
Petition the European Commission
to do what’s right for women! In 2003, only 0.04% of the total
European Commission aid supported women-specific projects. This
is unacceptable! As of December 20th, sign the world-wide petition
to the European Commission asking them to increase their support
for women.
Source: report “Where is the Money for Women’s Rights
Work?”- Zed Books, October 2005.
For more on this initiative visit:
http://www.peacewomen.org/campaigns/global/Campaign88days.html
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For more women, peace and
security initiatives – in country, regional, global and international,
visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/campaigns/global/index.html
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7.
GENDER AND PEACEKEEPING UPDATE |
Q&A:
AFRICAN PEACEKEEPING OPERATIONS
December 7, 2005 - (New York Times) Some of the most
challenging conflicts in the world at the moment are in Africa:
the crisis in the Darfur region of Sudan and less-than-transparent
governments and ongoing uncertainty in Sierra Leone, Angola, and
the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC) are just some examples.
In many cases, the developed world watches these conflicts develop;
in the worst cases, as in the 1994 Rwandan genocide, it does nothing
to intervene. When it does intervene- most often in the form of
a United Nations (UN) peacekeeping mission- the results have been
mixed, experts say. Below is a look at peacekeeping missions in
Africa.
UNMIL
OFFICER RAPES TWO CHILDREN
November 29, 2005 (AllAfrica.com) The crime of Rape has become
endemic in the Liberian society to the extent that nearly everyday
a female child falls prey to the nefarious desire of certain unscrupulous
men who have the tendency of satisfying their sexual desire to the
detriment of children including babies in some instances. It would
seem that the snail pace adopted by the security forces and judicial
workers in bringing rapists to book, continues to impart negatively
on the society as the commission of rape is commonplace.
For PeaceWomen’s Peacekeeping Watch index,
visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/un/pkwatch/pkwatch.html
For more gender and peacekeeping
news, visit PeaceWomen’s Gender and Peacekeeping News Index:
http://www.peacewomen.org/un/pkwatch/pknews.html
Back to TOp
8.
WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY CALENDAR |
Conference: Peacekeeping, Reconstruction and Stability Operations
in Africa 2006: Deploying Successful Support, Peacekeeping and Developmental
Missions in Africa
27-31 March 2006, Indaba Hotel, Fourways, Johannesburg,
South Africa
Organised by the International Quality and Productivity
Centre, this conference will highlight case studies and solutions
to challenges in AU and UN Peace Support Operations, Post-Conflict
Reconstruction and conflict prevention in Africa.
Keynote Speakers:
Honourable Mr Aziz Pahad, Deputy Minister, Department of Foreign
Affairs, South Africa
Honourable Mrs Nozizwe Madlala-Routledge, Deputy Minister, Department
of Health, South Africa
Ambassador Gertrude Mongela, President, Pan African Parliament
Theresa Whelan, US Deputy Assistant Secretary of Defense for African
Affairs
Theo Kaspers, Deputy Head of Unit for the African Peace Facility
in Europe Aid, European Commission
For more information on this event , please
visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/un/pkwatch/Events/IQDC.pdf
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Presentation on Women, Peace and Security
by Cora Weiss of the Hague Appeal for Peace
15 December 2005, 2:00 pm, 777 UN plaza, New York
Peace Action International and the Peace Caucus present a talk on
women peace and security by Cora Weiss president of the Hague Appeal
for Peace and a long time activist in the movements for human rights,
women's rights and peace.
Venue:
Conference Room of the Presbyterian Office
7th fl., 777 UN Plaza
NY, NY 10017
A holiday reception will follow after the presentation.
UN ground passes not needed.
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Central Asian Regional Consultation on Violence
Against Women
14 - 16 December 2005, Kazakhstan
The UN Development Fund For Women (UNIFEM) will be hosting a Central
Asia Regional Consultation on EVAW (ending violence against women)
in Kazakstan with the UN Special Rapporteur on Violence Against
Women.
For more information please contact alice.shackelford@undp.org
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For the complete calendar, CLICK
HERE.
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The
PeaceWomen is a project of the Women's
International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF).
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