|
1325
PeaceWomen E-News
Issue
#84
12 December 2006
FOCUS ON VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
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-owner@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. Editorial:Time to act
on Violence against Women
2. Women, Peace and Security News
3. Feature Statement: Make Police
and Military Best Allies in Combating Violence against Women
4. Feature Resource: The Girl child and Armed conflict
5. Feature Event: Claiming
Our Rights, Defending Our Future: Celebrating 16 Years of 16 Days
of Activism on gender violence
6. Feature Initiative:
Call for Input: Global Report on Sexual Violence in Conflict
7. Gender & Peacekeeping Update:
Peacekeeping Watch & Peacekeeping Resources
8. NGO Working Group on Women, Peace &
Security Update: Letter regarding
Fiji Coup
9. UNIFEM Update:
Gender, Peace and Security Consortium and 2007 Consolidated Appeal
10. Women, Peace and Security Calendar
The PeaceWomen Project is a project of the Women's International
League for Peace and Freedom. Please visit us at http://www.peacewomen.org.
1.
EDITORIAL
The PeaceWomen Team
|
This time of year is always particularly
poignant for women’s human rights advocates around the world.
It is a time that includes a number of days dedicated to highlighting
three issues that affect many women closely: Violence against Women,
HIV/AIDS and violations of human rights in general.
The news stories featured in this edition of the E-news range from
Colombia to Afghanistan, from Kashmir to the Democratic Republic
of the Congo, and they all indicate that violence against women
continues to be a persistent, and in some cases, escalating reality
in women’s lives (see item 2). While the experience of violence
varies depending on the differing circumstances that women are in,
their vulnerability is greatly aggravated in armed conflict and
post-conflict situations. This vulnerability is particularly acute
in the case of girl children, as indicated in this edition’s
feature resource, a UN report focused on the impact of conflict
on the girl child (see item 4). The report notes the urgent need
for better documentation, monitoring and reporting on the extreme
suffering that armed conflict inflicts on girls, as well as on the
many roles girls play during conflict and its aftermath. It is hoped
that this issue can be brought to the fore during the 51st Commission
on the Status of Women, whose focus in 2007 is the elimination of
all forms of discrimination and violence against the girl child.
(see item 10)
The need for documentation of the impact of conflict on women is
echoed in our feature initiative, a general call for input for a
Global Report on Sexual Violence in Conflict, by the Geneva center
for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces (see item 5). Among other
things the report will seek to identify good practice in security
sector responses to sexual violence in conflict. The role of the
security sector is also highlighted in our feature statement, from
the UN’s Institute for Training and Research on the Advancement
of Women (INSTRAW), which addresses the need to make allies of the
police and the military in combating violence against women (see
item 3). Ensuring awareness and accountability on this issue among
those trained to protect civilians is clearly of paramount important,
given continued reports of sexual exploitation and abuse of women
and children by UN peacekeepers and other field personnel (see item
7). It is hoped that various measures discussed, and commitments
made at a December high-level conference on combating sexual exploitation
and abuse by UN and NGO field personnel will be fully and rapidly
implemented in the coming year. The PeaceWomen Project will continue
to monitor and report on developments on these issues.
The last word however, rests with the women across the globe who
are speaking out and mobilizing against violence in their communities
and around the world. Some of these women’s voices are highlighted
in this month’s feature event, a celebration of 16 years of
the “16 Days of activism on gender violence” campaign.
(see item 6). As indicated in some of our featured news stories,
the work of such activists is often done under conditions of grave
peril and threat. PeaceWomen salutes them all for their courage,
and for their contributions to the goal of making justice, peace
and security a reality for all women.
• • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • •
As always we welcome your contributions
to the newsletter’s content. The newsletter is sent out at
the end of each month. We will feature the deadline for submissions
for the next edition in each newsletter. Contributions for the January
2007 edition should be sent to enewssubmissions@peacewomen.org
by Thursday 18 January 2007.
Back to Top
2.
WOMEN,
PEACE AND SECURITY NEWS |
FIJI:
WOMEN HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDERS THREATENED
12 December 2006 - (FWRM Press release) Human rights organizations
and individuals have been threatened with violence, including rape,
for speaking out on the current impasse in Fiji.
WOMEN
DEMAND END TO DARFUR RAPES
10 December 2006 - (BBC News) International stateswomen have made
a joint call for an end to rape and sexual violence in Sudan's conflict-torn
region of Darfur. Peacekeepers must be sent to protect women there,
the group said in a letter published by newspapers worldwide. It
says rape is being used "on a daily basis" as a weapon
of war in Darfur.
GENDER
EQUALITY IN ARAB WORLD CRITICAL FOR PROGRESS AND PROSPERITY, UN
REPORT WARNS
December 7, 2006 – (UN News Centre) Women in the Arab world
are still denied equality of opportunity, although their disempowerment
is a critical factor crippling the Arab nations’ quest to
return to the first rank of global leaders in commerce, learning
and culture, according to a new United Nations-sponsored report
released today.
PAIN
OF AFGHAN SUICIDE WOMEN
December 7, 2006 -(BBC News) Gulsoom is 17-years-old and married.
Last year she tried to commit suicide - she failed. She set fire
to herself but, against the odds, survived with appalling injuries.
Her plight reflects that of a growing number of young Afghan women,
campaigners say. Driven to desperation by forced marriages and abusive
husbands, more and more are seeking release through self-immolation.
NEPAL-WOMEN
THREATEN POLL BOYCOTT
December 7, 2006 – (Kantipur Report) Women political leaders
on Wednesday warned that they would boycott polls and would not
even vote if the political parties fail to ensure 33 per cent women's
participation in the upcoming election for Constituent Assembly
(CA).
WOMEN'S
RIGHTS ACTIVISTS ARRESTED
December 6, 2006 - (Green Left) Sixty-three Women Of Zimbabwe Arise
(WOZA) members were arrested on November 29 during a peaceful launch
of its People’s Charter. They were taken to Bulawayo Central
Police Station. WOZA leaders Jenni Williams and Magodonga Mahlangu
were among those arrested.
A
PROUD IRAQI LAMENTS VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN FROM HER SPANISH EXILE
December 6, 2006 - (UNHCR) Taiseer* thought things could only get
better in her native Iraq after a United States-led invasion force
toppled President Saddam Hussein in March 2003. She never dreamed
that life would soon change for the worse for the country –
especially its womenfolk.
IACHR
RELEASES REPORT ON THE IMPACT OF THE COLOMBIAN ARMED CONFLICT ON
WOMEN
December 5, 2006 -(ReliefWeb) The actors in the Colombian armed
conflict, in particular the paramilitary groups and the guerrilla,
employ physical, sexual and psychological violence against women
as a strategy of war. This is one of the most alarming conclusions
of a report prepared by the Rapporteurship on the Rights of Women
of the Inter-American Commission on Human Rights (IACHR) that becomes
public today.
UN
HOSTS MEETING AIMED AT TACKLING PROBLEMS OF SEXUAL ABUSE BY FIELD
PERSONNEL
December 4, 2006 – (UN News Centre) DNA samples, new international
pacts and assistance to victims were among the measures discussed
today at a conference on preventing sexual exploitation and abuse
by United Nations and non-governmental organization (NGO) personnel,
where Secretary-General Kofi Annan set a strict tone by declaring
that no one should be above the law.
CALL
IN FIJI FOR WOMEN TO MEDIATE BETWEEN GOVERNMENT AND MILITARY OVER
CRISIS
December 4, 2006 - (Radio New Zealand) There's a call in Fiji for
women to mediate between the government and the military as unease
continues with threats of a military coup. A key NGO, the Citizens
Constitutional Forum, says there's a clear absence of women being
used as mediators despite offers of help during the impasse.
WOMEN
WORST SUFFERERS IN JAMMU AND KASHMIR
December 1, 2006 – (Hindustan Times) Women in Kashmir are
caught between two guns - terrorists and troops - Prof Seema Shekhawat,
research assistant PoK Project said on Friday at Centre for Strategic
Studies and Regional Studies, Jammu University.
PRESS
CONFERENCE BY EMERGENCY RELIEF COORDINATOR ON SEXUAL VIOLENCE
December 1, 2006 - (United Nations Department of Public information)
Jan Egeland, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs and
Emergency Relief Coordinator, today denounced the use of rape as
a weapon of war and called upon the authorities in one of the most
affected countries, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, to ensure
that rape victims - including those traumatized by fistula - no
longer find themselves ostracized in their communities, as is now
so often the case.
ZIMBABWE:
WOMEN HUMAN RIGHTS DEFENDERS BEAR BRUNT OF GOVT OPPRESSION
December 1, 2006 – (Zimbabwe Independent) As the world commemorated
International Women Human Rights Defenders Day this week, Zimbabwe
Lawyers for Human Rights (ZLHR) takes the opportunity to highlight
some of the hazards faced by such activists in their work to protect
and promote human rights.
MANY
TO BLAME FOR WAR CRIMES AGAINST CONGO'S WOMEN
November 29, 2006 – (afrol News) In the fertile hills of eastern
Congo Kinshasa (DRC), the region's women tell tales of war crimes
crueller than others can imagine. They are angry with brutal rebels
groups, Rwandans, the national army, mineral companies and the US,
which they say supplied the arms. And the greatest war crime of
all, they warn, is not letting their voices be heard even today.
UNHCR
CHIEF CONDEMNS CULTURE OF NEGLECT AND DENIAL ABOUT VIOLENCE AGAINST
WOMEN
November 24, 2006 – (UNHCR) UN High Commissioner for Refugees
António Guterres on Friday said there was a "massive"
culture of neglect and denial about violence against women. "That
culture of neglect and denial exists everywhere," Guterres
told staff of the refugee agency during a ceremony to launch the
annual 16 Days of Activism to Eliminate Violence Against Women.
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
For
more country-specific women, peace and security news, CLICK
HERE
For
more international women, peace and security news, CLICK
HERE
Back to Top
Make police and military
best allies in combating violence against women:
Message by UN-INSTRAW Director
Carmen Moreno on the International Day for the Elimination of the
Violence Against Women, observed on 25 November
One of every three women in the world has been a victim of violence
in her lifetime. Violence against women is one of the four major
causes of death on the planet today.Countries where 30 percent of
women are being physically injured by their partners are rather
the rule than the exception. Yet, even the most horrific of those
statistics still largely underestimates the harsh realities. How
many millions of women will never report a case of rape because
of their fear of being the ones blamed instead of the perpetrator?
How many complaints will never be reported because the police officers
refuse to mingle into “domestic matters”?How many crimes
against women will remain unpunished because the voice of men is
louder than theirs?
Although figures reveal that a majority of the crimes are perpetrated
at home, UNINSTRAW agrees with those who believe that domestic violence
goes far beyond the sphere of the household. When a woman is assaulted,
the whole society gets hurt. The enormous costs resulting from violence
against women affect us all. Both men and women are part of the
problem; both of them must be part of the solution. Ignoring this
problem as a serious crime and human rights violation makes the
eradication or even reduction of violence against women impossible.
It has become increasingly clear that police and military can play
a crucial role in this context, either positive or negative. Continuous
education programs such as gender training sessions aimed towards
the security sector’s stakeholders, including police officers,
military units, lawyers, judges could help to prevent and respond
to gendered insecurities and provide a better access to justice
for the victims.
Unless police and military are willing and fully equipped to adequately
deal with female specific needs, there will be no relief for the
millions of women who suffer. Making security institutions our best
allies in combating violence against women must be one of the priority
concerns of UN agencies, governments and civil society. It should
be unacceptable that those who are educated and trained to protect
civilians, especially vulnerable groups, may pose a threat to women’s
rights and security. The zero tolerance policy towards perpetrators
of sexual exploitation and abuse as well as other forms of gender-based
violence is resolutely supported by UN-INSTRAW. Increasing female
recruitment and addressing the under-representation of women in
decision-making positions within the security sector could also
help achieve more gender sensitivity in the police armed forces
and court rooms.
Therefore, UN-INSTRAW is advocating
the full implementation of UN Security Council Resolution 1325 among
other binding international agreements concerning women’s
security. Having recently published a guide on how to create national
action plans for the full implementation of this resolution INSTRAW
gives concrete and practical support to State actors in order to
reduce violence against women and to create an environment where
men AND women feel safe.. In this context, further cooperation between
UN agencies, governments and NGOs is one key for success. A couple
of years ago, UN-INSTRAW initiated the creation of a global network
on gender and security reform issues.
Now over 150 NGO practitioners,
researchers and policymakers regularly post and share information
on how to integrate a gender perspective into the policies and institutions
that are responsible for the security of nations, communities and
individuals. Earlier this month, UN-INSTRAW and Geneva Center for
the Democratic Control of Armed Forces (DCAF) jointly launched a
new Gender and Security Sector Reform (SSR) Working Group. This
venue for highly-specialized experts from all over the world plans
to develop collaborative projects, such as training materials, reports,
workshops and assessment tools in order to mainstream gender issues
into SSR.Furthermore, UN-INSTRAW takes part actively in the sixteen
days campaign on violence against women and produces ongoing research
regarding this topic. New publications on violence against women
are planned for 2007. Yet, building bridges between the different
stakeholders of the security sector shouldn’t stop from raising
consciousness at the grassroots level.
On the occasion of the United
Nations-backed “16 Days Campaign of Activism to End Violence
against Women”, UN-INSTRAW joined other UN agencies to sponsor
a theatre performance organized by the Women’s Minister in
the Dominican Republic, country where the three Mirabal sisters
were killed more than 45 years ago. Artistic ways of expression
can effectively help gender activists reach a broader audience by
conveying the message in a clear, meaningful and eye-catching way.People
must understand that no one is immune when it comes to violence
against women. We are all at risk, either being victims or being
perpetrators. Every one of us, men and women, can decide to make
a difference to end violence against our mothers, our sisters and
our daughters.
Press contact:
Mr. Laurent Duvillier
Media & Communications Specialist
Tel: 1 809-685-2111 ext. 227
E-mail: lduvillier@un-instraw.org
• • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • •
Back to Top
The girl child and armed conflict: Recognizing and addressing grave
violations of girls’ human rights
UN Division for the Advancement of Women (DAW) in collaboration
with UNICEF, September 2006
During armed conflict, girls
are subject to widespread and, at times, systematic forms of human
rights violations that have mental, emotional, spiritual, physical
and material repercussions. These violations include illegal detention
with or without family members, abduction and forced removal from
families and homes, disappearances, torture and other inhuman treatment,
amputation and mutilation, forced recruitment into fighting forces
and groups, slavery, sexual exploitation, increased exposure to
HIV/AIDS, and a wide range of physical and sexual violations, including
rape, enforced pregnancy, forced prostitution, forced marriage and
forced child-bearing.There is urgent need for better documentation,
monitoring and reporting on the extreme suffering that armed conflict
inflicts on girls, as well as on the many roles girls play during
conflict and its aftermath.
For the full report, please 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
Claiming
Our Rights, Defending Our Future: Celebrating 16 Years of 16 Days
of Activism
Center for Women’s Global Leadership, December 7, 2006, New
York City
For many women’s right advocates
this time of year is one of bearing witness through awareness-raising
and advocacy. Over the past sixteen years the period between 25
November and 10 December- - has been characterized by international
and inter-regional solidarity among women’s rights defenders,
organizations, and networks through an international campaign called
16 Days of Activism Against Gender Violence.
The 16 Days of Activism Campaign
was initially birthed by the participants in the Center for Women’s
Global Leadership’s first Leadership Institute in 1991. Participants
chose the dates, November 25, International Day for Elimination
of 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.
To mark the sixteenth anniversary
of the Campaign, the Center for Women’s Global Leadership
(CWGL) hosted an event, entitled Claiming Our Rights, Defending
Our Future: Celebrating 16 Years of 16 Days of Activism, in New
York City on the evening of Thursday, December 7, 2006. During the
event, a number of leading advocates for women’s rights reflected
on the successes in and challenges to the work to eliminate violence
against women. The speakers included CWGL Executive Director, Charlotte
Bunch, Radhika Coomaraswamy, Madeleine Rees, Mónica Alemán,
Vahida Nainar, and Cynthia Rothschild.* In addition, a number of
women around the world who have participated in the 16 Days Campaign
contributed messages to the anniversary event. The messages, which
include the two extracts below, were read aloud at the event.
The first year of the 16 Days
Campaign in Belgrade, Serbia was in 1995, in the midst of the fascist
regime, just after the Dayton Peace Agreement, which ended the war
in Bosnia and Herzegovina. Before that all the street manifestations
were in connection to anti-war or anti-regime actions. Some of us
thought, “Ok, let’s fill streets with feminists against
male violence,” and we organized the first Take Back the Night
demo!...Ever since that day, with 16 Days, we have been in the street.
From 2001 on we have organized feminist piazza theater in a dozen
towns in Serbia, as well discussions in public, on TV and radio,
in parliament and social work centers.
Lepa Mladjenovic, Autonomous Women's Center, Belgrade, Serbia
The primary message of the Campaign
is that violence against women (VAW) is a human rights violation.
Women’s rights defenders have reiterated this message as they
have pushed for stronger bodies of law and practice at various levels
of governance and advocated on numerous issues related to violence
against women (VAW), such as HIV/AIDS, reproductive and sexual rights,
human security, and peacebuilding. Further, participants in the
Campaign have highlighted the connection among different types of
violences in the continuum of violence against women and those of
differing natures, including emotional and verbal violence. Throughout
the sixteen years of the 16 Days Campaign, women in militarized
societies and situations of armed conflict and post-conflict have
found leverage from the Campaign to make their voices heard on peace
and security issues within their respective societies. For example,
this year organizations in Haiti and Colombia celebrated women’s
rights defenders; an organization in the United States showed a
film on violence against women on the US-Mexico border; another
in Nigeria held an event on women’s strategies against political
intimidation; and another in Lebanon sponsored an exhibition to
raise awareness on honor killings.
The 16 days of activism campaign
has the potential, to assist women like our sisters in rural and
isolated communities…there are many violent experiences which
women [have] faced and which have to be taken into account as part
of Fiji's national reconciliation and peacebuilding process. I have
to say, that I am looking forward to the opportunity ahead of us
in 2007 to strengthen our own rural community radio networks and
broadcast systems; to strengthening our young women's empowerment
programme using community radio, and also reviving our regional
media initiative on UNSCR 1325 in Fiji, Bougainville, Solomon Islands,
and Tonga to assist in using information and communication channels
to add to the empowerment of women in our communities.
Sharon Bhagwan Rolls, femLINKPACIFIC, based in Fiji [written prior
to the recent military coup in Fiji]
The Campaign’s message that
violence against women is a human rights violation was first articulated
at a time when women’s rights had little traction on the human
rights agenda. Two years later, in 1993, governments at the Vienna
World Conference on Human Rights met women’s rights advocates
demands to name women’s rights as integral to the human rights
agenda. After significant development in the field of human rights
and humanitarian law, the recently-released United Nations Secretary-General’s
Study on Violence Against Women affirms that VAW is unequivocally
a critical human rights violation. Moreover, in light of international
standards and norms, the report states that VAW invokes State responsibility,
which includes the due diligence of States to prevent violence against
women by State agents and non-State actors (para 367). In addition,
the report highlights the role of the women’s movement in
identifying and addressing violences against women, and supports
the role of women’s rights organizations in informing State
action on issues of VAW (paras 370-1).
The work of women’s movements,
including that related to the 16 Days Campaign, has advanced understanding
of multiple intersectionalities of discrimination, the relationship
between sexuality and violence, and the integral links between human
rights and security. It’s these achievements that the UN Secretary-General
and General Assembly note, and that we celebrate as we enter a new
year with the determination to eliminate violence against women.
Kara Piccirilli, Consultant
Center for Women’s Global Leadership
Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey
* Charlotte Bunch (Founder and Executive
Director, Center for Women’s Global Leadership, The State
University of New Jersey)
Radhika Coomaraswamy (UN Special Representative of the Secretary-General
for Children and Armed Conflict)
Madeleine Rees (Head of the Women’s Rights and Gender Unit,
UN Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights).
Vahida Nainar (Vice President, Urgent Action Fund-Africa)
Mónica Alemán (Program Director, MADRE; Coordinator,
International Indigenous Women’s Forum)
Cynthia Rothschild (Senior Policy Advisor, Center for Women's Global
Leadership, Rutgers, The State University of New Jersey)
• • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • •
For more information on the
16 Days of Activism Campaign visit http://www.cwgl.rutgers.edu/16days/about.html
Back to Top
Call for Input: Global Report
on Sexual Violence in Conflict, December 2006
The Geneva Centre for the
Democratic Control of Armed Forces (DCAF) is preparing a Global
Report on Sexual Violence in Conflict. The objectives of this Global
Report are to provide a global overview of the prevalence and nature
of sexual violence in conflict by collating existing data, and identify
good practice in security sector responses to sexual violence in
conflict. In particular, the centre seeks:
- qualitative and quantitative
data to be used in the report; and
- examples of good practice in responses of the police, military,
peacekeepers, prisons, border authorities and the judiciary to sexual
violence.
For more information, please
contact:
Megan Bastick, Special Programmes Coordinator
Geneva Centre for the Democratic Control of Armed Forces
Email: m.bastick@dcaf.ch
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
•
For more women, peace and
security initiatives – in country, regional, global and international,
visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/campaigns/global/index.html
Back to Top
7.GENDER
AND PEACEKEEPING UPDATE |
PEACEKEEPING WATCH: News
Fears
over Haiti child 'abuse'
30 November 2006 (BBC News)- A BBC investigation commissioned as
part of Generation Next - a week of programmes focusing on people
under 18 - has uncovered fresh allegations of the sexual abuse of
children by United Nations peacekeepers.
UNMIL
to
deal with sexual exploitation
December 1, 2006- (The Inquirer, Monrovia) The United Nations Mission
in Liberia (UNMIL) says it takes the issue of sexual exploitation
and abuse in the country very seriously and is at the moment implementing
measures to prevent and deal with the issues.
GENDER AND PEACEKEEPING Resources:
Reform or
more of the same? Gender mainstreaming and the changing nature of
UN Peace Operations
Karen Barnes, York Centre for International and Security Studies,
Working paper No. 41, October 2006
The last fifteen years have been a time of dramatic change in terms
of reform of UN peace operations, major shifts in academic thinking
around the issues of conflict, security, and development, and the
recognition of women’s roles in conflict and their right to
participate in peacebuilding processes. These three concurrent changes
all have the same goal of creating the conditions for a more inclusive
and sustainable peace in the face of the post-Cold War instability
experienced in many parts of the world. However, the ongoing failure
to effectively integrate gender issues into peacebuilding discourse
and practice would indicate that this has not been achieved. This
paper will explore the evolving rhetoric of the UN’s peacebuilding
agenda,explaining the continuing exclusion of women as a result
of the failure to see gender issues as a security concern, despite
the increased recognition of the links between both gender and development
and development and security.
For the full document please
visit:
http://www.peacewomen.org/resources/Peacekeeping/Academic/reform_or_more.pdf
• • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • •
For PeaceWomen’s Peacekeeping Watch index,
visit: http://www.peacewomen.org/un/pkwatch/pkwatch.html
For more gender and peacekeeping news and resources,
visit PeaceWomen’s Gender and Peacekeeping Index:
http://www.peacewomen.org/un/pkwatch/pknews.html
Back to TOp
call for restoration of democratic
process and rule of law in fiji
NGO Working Group Letter
to Pacific Region governments regarding December 5th coup d’état
in Fiji
8 December 2008
Dear Ambassador,
The NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security, a coalition
of NGOs working for the full implementation of Security Council
resolution 1325, expresses its alarm at the December 5th coup d’état
in Fiji.
As a leader in the Pacific Region, we urge you to ensure that the
concerns and recommendations of Fiji’s civil society, especially
women and women’s groups, are included in attempts to diffuse
this crisis and to restore democratic processes.
Women and women’s groups in Fiji and in the Pacific Island
Region have played an active, vital role in the building and maintenance
of peace, democracy and human rights. Their experiences and resources
must be urgently called upon and utilized, as called for in Security
Council resolution 1325, which recognizes “the important role
of women in the prevention and resolution of conflicts and in peace-building,
and…the importance of their equal participation and full involvement
in all efforts for the maintenance and promotion of peace and security.”
The NGO Working Group joins Fiji women’s NGOs and civil society
in urgently calling on decision-makers to:
- Insist that the rule of law, lawful democratic processes and institutions
and the constitution be respected, including a demand for an immediate
end to the military coup d’état and a return to legitimate
rule;
- Establish a binding Commission of Truth, Justice and Resolution
in Fiji under the Commission of Inquiry Act, with powers to obtain
all relevant evidence;
- Call for a peaceful reconciliation of differences within the constitutional
framework, exploring all domestic and democratic means of resolving
the conflict;
- Request the United Nations, Member States and the Secretary-General
to support national and regional efforts to overcome the crisis
through dialogue.
Attached to this letter are the names and contact details of civil
society leaders in Fiji with extensive peacebuilding experience.
We encourage decision-makers to consult with these leaders in order
to effectively resolve the current crisis and to prevent any further
escalation of conflict.
Sincerely yours,
Gina Torry, Coordinator
Signed :
The Members of the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace & Security
• •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • •
For more information visit: http://www.womenpeacesecurity.org/
Back to TOP
Gender, Peace and Security Consortium
On November 13th UNIFEM met in New York with 12
other organizations to discuss the possibility of developing a Consortium
on Gender, War and Peace. The organizations in attendance represented
the areas of research, advocacy, and political analysis of conflict.
A steering committee, representing each of these areas, will be
formed to further this partnership as well as develop initial fundraising
activities to move the initiative forward. This Consortium will
enhance and coordinate collaboration between like-minded organizations
working in the field of human rights, gender equality and security.
The intent is to link the existing research, data and action in
the area of gender equality and security for more focused advocacy
and analysis. UNIFEM has subsequently begun an exercise to map organizational
advantages, gaps, dissemination strategies, and geographic coverage
to better understand similar existing work. Periodic communication
will be sent regarding the progress of this initiative and ways
in which other organizations can participate.
2007 Consolidated Appeal
UNIFEM is requesting more than US$4.1 million as
part of the 2007 Consolidated Appeal which was launched today in
New York. The requested funding will go to support a total of eight
projects in the Occupied Palestinian Territories, Uganda, Somalia
and the Great Lakes Region. Several initiatives are planned to be
carried out in partnership with other agencies and NGOs. Of the
US$4.1 million asked for, more than US$1.4 million would go to support
regional networking and advocacy on the rights of women affected
by crisis in the Great Lakes Region. A particular focus would be
on promoting ratification and implementation of legislation to protect
women from sexual and gender-based violence and ensure the property
rights of returning women refugees and internally displaced persons.
Another US$1.25 million has been requested for four
projects in the Occupied Palestinian Territories to: i) provide
academic counseling for rural women to increase their level of education
and enhance opportunities on the job market; ii) establish and support
psychosocial teams for family outreach as well as socio-legal defence
centres to enhance the response to and protection against violence
and abuse of children and women; iii) establish women's food production
units to generate income and improve the nutrition of children;
and iv) provide medical, psychosocial and legal assistance to Palestinian
female prisoners and detainees in Israeli prisons. For both Somalia
and Uganda, UNIFEM has asked for US$650,000 and US$725,000 respectively
to help protect women and young girls from gender-based violence
in IDP settlements as well as areas of return and improve services
and response mechanisms. Another US$100,000 has been requested to
help facilitate effective mainstreaming of gender in all aspects
of the humanitarian response for Somalia.
For more information please visit http://unifem.org/gender_issues/governance_peace_security/
and
http://www.reliefweb.int/rw/RWB.NSF/db900SID/KHII-6VS92C?OpenDocument
• • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • •
UNIFEM’s Web Portal on Women, Peace and Security, CLICK
HERE
Back to TOp
10.
WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY CALENDAR |
CoMMITTEE on the Elimination
of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), 37th Session
15 January - 2 February 2007, UN Headquarters, New York
The 37th session of the CEDAW Committee will be held between 15
January and 2 February 2007. During the session the Committee will
examine the reports of the following 15 States parties: Austria,
Azerbaijan, Colombia, Greece, India, Kazakhstan, Maldives, Namibia,
Netherlands, Nicaragua, Peru, Poland,Suriname, Vietnam, and Tajikistan.
For more information, please visit
http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/cedaw/37sess.htm
• • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • •
Transforming Democracy:
Feminist Visions and Strategies
17-19 January 2007, Nairobi, Kenya
The third Feminist Dialogues, "Transforming Democracy: Feminist
Visions and Strategies" will be held from 17-19 January 2007,
in Nairobi just prior to the next World Social Forum. This two and
a half day meeting will bring together around two hundred and fifty
women from different parts of the globe to deepen the intensive
dialogues on feminist perspectives and strategies in addressing
fundamentalisms, militarism and neo-liberal globalisation.
For more information, please visit
http://www.feministdialogues.isiswomen.org/index.php?option=com_content&task=view&id=38&Itemid=40
• • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • •
TRANSCEND Advanced International Training
Programme - Gender and Peacebuilding
January 29 - February 2, 2007 Cluj-Napoca, Romania
A Five-Days International Training Programme for Practitioners,
Policy Makers, International and National Agency Staff and NGOs
working in peacebuilding, conflict transformation and post-war recovery.
Organised by TRANSCEND and the Peace Action, Training and Research
Institute of Romania (PATRIR)
For more information, please visit
http://www.peacewomen.org/frame/calendar/events/Romania.html
• • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • •
Commission on the Status of Women, 51st
session
26th February - 9th March, UN headquarters, New York
The fifty-first session of the Commission on the Status of Women
will take place from 26 February to 9 March 2007. In accordance
with its multi-year programme of work for 2007-2009, the Commission
will consider “The elimination of all forms of discrimination
and violence against the girl child” as its priority theme.
For more information, please visit
http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/csw/51sess.htm
• • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • • • • •
• • • • •
Roadmap to 1325: European Networking Conference:
Gender in the European Union’s peace and security policy
4th – 6th of May 2007, Berlin
The German Women’s Security Council in cooperation with The
Feminist Institute of the Heinrich Böll Foundation is organising
a conference on Gender and the European Union’s peace and
security policy. In the first half of 2007 Germany holds the presidency
of the European Union. 2007 is also the European Year of Equal Opportunities
for All. The German government should utilise the presidency of
the European Union to play a decisive role in the implementation
of Resolution 1325 of the UN Security Council at the European level.
For more information, please visit
http://www.un1325.de/akt-mai07-plan-en.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: info@peacewomen.org.
To unsubscribe from the 1325 PeaceWomen E-News, reply to this email
with "unsubscribe" as the subject heading.
Questions, concerns and comments
and other submissions should be directed to enewssubmissions@peacewomen.org.
Back to Top
|