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1325
PeaceWomen E-News
Issue
#91
25 July 2007
GENDER & displacement
The
Security Council unanimously adopted Resolution 1325 on women, peace
and security, 31 October 2000. CLICK
HERE for the full text of the resolution.
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with "subscribe" as the subject heading.
For past issues of the newsletter, CLICK
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THIS ISSUE OF 1325 PEACEWOMEN E-NEWS FEATURES:
1. Editorial:Gender-sensitive
responses to displacement
2. Women, Peace and Security News
3. Feature Analysis: Women,
Displacement and Security - An Analysis
4. Feature Statement: WILPF (Australia) letter
on "Comfort Women"
5. Feature Initiatives: Displacement
in Colombia, Resettlement in Australia
6. Feature Resources: Displacement
and Gender-Based Persecution
7. Translation Update: Croation
and Hindi Translations now available
8. Gender and Peacekeeping Update:
Peacekeeping Watch and Resources
9. NGO Working Group on Women, Peace & Security
Update: 1325 workshops in Central Asia
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
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This month’s 1325 E-news edition
focuses on the nexus of gender, security and displacement. The lives
of women and men in situations of crisis and conflict are often
over-shadowed by the socio-economic, political and security risks
that come with being forcibly displaced. As eloquently put in a
featured report from a recent WILPF delegation to Colombia, “Being
forced to move from your home and your land has many implications…your
house and land is the base of your security, your life project.”
(Item 5)
This report from Colombia highlights
what is already well known, that women and children account for
the majority of those displaced internally and as refugees. This
has clear implications for the kind of action and assistance required
from governments, humanitarian organizations, development agencies
and the security sector. In our feature analysis this month, Ramina
Johal broadly reviews the status of international efforts to respond
to displacement in a gender-sensitive manner. (item 3) The analysis
makes note of various forms of displacement, and its associated
vulnerabilities, including trafficking in persons. But while trafficking
and other forms of gender based violence and exploitation have gained
increased attention at an international level, their victims may
receive little support and no justice. This is the theme of our
feature statement, a response by the WILPF section in Australia
to a recent Washington Post letter by a number Japanese policymakers,
denying Japan’s system of forced prostitution during World
War II. (item 4)
Security Council Resolution 1325
can be a useful reference point on the needs of displaced women,
particularly with regard to the security of women and girls in displaced
contexts and their participation in decision-making. While the resolution
does not cover the entirety of issues in displacement, there are
other international policy documents that lay out in more breadth
the political and legal protection, welfare needs and secure environment
needed by those affected by displacement.
The Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination
Against Women (CEDAW) is an important instrument in this regard,
and our feature resource this month is an Internal Displacement
Monitoring Centre report on Kenya directed at the CEDAW committee
at its current 39th session. (Item 10) The report highlights the
gaps in the Kenya government’s recognition and response to
the needs of women displaced by drought, insecurity and ethnic conflict,
factors that are often inter-linked in all Horn of Africa nations.
(Item 6) However while women, particularly in pastoral communities,
often bear the brunt of these factors, they are also taking an active
lead in seeking peaceful solutions to such intercene conflicts,
as illustrated in one featured news story this month. (Item 2)
We would like to thank Ramina Johal,
Carol Shaw and the WILPF sections in Colombia and Australia for
their contributions to this month’s edition. We continue to
welcome contributions to the newsletter’s content. Contributions
for the August 2007 edition should be sent to
enewssubmissions@peacewomen.org
by Thursday 16 August 2007.
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2.
WOMEN,
PEACE AND SECURITY NEWS |
ZIMBABWE'S
WOMEN 'FACE BRUTALITY'
July 25, 2007 - (BBC News) Women who oppose Robert Mugabe's
regime in Zimbabwe are suffering increasing violence and repression,
a study says.
THREE
WOMEN KILLED EAST OF CENTRAL GAZA: WITNESSES
July 23 (2007) (People's Daily Online) Three Palestinian women were
found killed early on Sunday in an opened area east of the central
Gaza Strip town of Deir el-Ballah, eyewitnesses and police sources
reported.
WOMEN
PUSH ONTO CONTINENT'S AGENDA
23 July 2007 (Africa Renewal) The status of women in many African
countries is improving. "Africa is in a period of great experiment,"
says Ms. Anne Marie Goetz, who heads the governance, peace and security
division at the UN Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM). "Things
are starting to change, as countries see a window of opportunity
to create ways for women to contribute their skills and talents
to national development."
PRATIBHA PATIL NAMED INDIA'S FIRST FEMALE PRESIDENT
July 20, 2007 (International Herald Tribune): India got its first
female president Saturday in a victory hailed as a special moment
in a country where discrimination against women is often deep-rooted
and widespread.
THE MALDIVES
APPOINTS FIRST WOMEN JUDGES
July 18, 2007 – (Feminist Daily News Wire) The president of
the Maldives, an island nation in the Indian Ocean, has appointed
the country's first two women judges, and a third is expected to
join them this week. The appointments follow recommendations by
UN Special Rapporteur Leandro Despouy to end gender discrimination
within the Maldives' judiciary by nominating women judges.
CONCERN ABOUT SEXUAL VIOLENCE IN BURUNDI
July 13, 2007 – (ReliefWeb) The U.N. Children's Fund (UNICEF)
says it is concerned about the large and growing number of children
in Burundi who are victims of sexual violence. UNICEF says few cases
are ever prosecuted and is calling for urgent reform of Burundi's
judicial system.
LOKIRIAMA WOMEN BECOME THE ARBITERS OF PEACE
11 July 2007 (Africa Interactive News) One of the things pastoralists
are notoriously known for is the violent resource-based conflicts
that have persistently sent a terrifying shock to the communities
and their environments.
SIERRA LEONE WOMEN TO LAUNCH VIOLENCE-FREE ELECTIONS CAMPAIGN
July 9 2007 - (Awareness Times) Women in Peace and Security Network-Africa
(WIPSEN-Africa) in collaboration with the Grass roots Empowerment
for Self Reliance (GEMS) with support from UNIFEM-Sierra Leone will
on Wednesday, July 11, 2007 draw women from civil society organizations
(CSOs) across the country in Bo to officially launch a mass advocacy
violence-free elections campaign.
FEMALE ACTIVISTS ON MISSION FOR PEACE
July 8, 2007 - (The Dallas Morning News) Banning land mines, fighting
exploitation of women and halting the trafficking of children are
all interconnected and key elements in the ongoing struggle for
world peace. Coming up with action plans to fight against these
and a host of other issues is the goal for Nobel Peace Prize laureate
Betty Williams and 1,000 women from 43 countries who will be in
Dallas this week for the International Women's Peace Conference.
PHILLIPINES: FEMALE PEACE ACTIVIST KILLED INSIDE HER HUT
June 28, 2007 - (Manila Standard Today) A communist sympathizer
turned peace advocate was shot and killed by armed men believed
to be communist guerrillas in Quezon province Monday night, her
group said yesterday.
JAPAN'S APOLOGY URGED ON 'COMFORT WOMEN'
June 26, 2007 - (Guardian Unlimited) A House committee is expected
to endorse a resolution urging Japan to apologize formally for coercing
thousands of women to work as sex slaves for its wartime military.
IRAQ: WOMEN RESIST RETURN TO SECTARIAN LAWS
June 25, 2007 - (IPS) - As Iraq struggles to define its future,
there is one important group that has been largely left out of the
process: women.
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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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WOMEN, DISPLACEMENT AND SECURITY: AN ANALYSIS
By Ramina Johal
Introduction
Designing responses and remedies for the displaced
is dependent upon how this population is defined by policymakers
and practitioners. Addressing the needs of women displaced by conflict
is further influenced by the application of gender approaches in
displacement, humanitarian and peace and security forums.
The following article draws particular attention
to the situation of displaced women and girls, focusing on the application
of gender sensitive approaches as highlighted in Security Council
Resolution 1325. It proposes, among other things, that in order
to address gender and displacement, key challenges, such as the
need for greater synergy between the UN’s work on displacement
and gender equality, must be addressed.
Where does addressing the needs of displaced
women, including through gender-sensitive approaches, fit in the
peace and security framework?
Through adopting resolution 1325 on Women, Peace
and Security (2000) the UN Security Council acknowledged women’s
contributions to peace-building, as well as their vulnerabilities
resulting from conflict. Article 12 specifically addresses refugees
in camps and Article 8 calls for attention to the special needs
of women and girls during repatriation, resettlement and post-conflict
processes in relation to peace agreements. Notwithstanding debates
on gaps in the resolution (for example, lack of reference to IDPs,
returnees, or persons residing outside camps; lack of attention
to women’s access to humanitarian programs and services) it
has served as an important vehicle for holding the UN and governments
accountable to women’s rights in conflict and post-conflict
settings. Other resolutions, such as those described above to establish
peacekeeping missions and on the protection of civilians in armed
conflict, have also been applied to reinforce accountability to
displaced women.
The advancement of gender-sensitive approaches in the peace and
security arena is another component of addressing the needs of women
IDPs, refugees and returnees. Articles 7 and 8 of Security Council
resolution 1325 reference gender-sensitive training and applying
a gender perspective to ensure attention to the needs of women in
repatriation and resettlement. Since 1997 the UN has been tasked
to apply gender mainstreaming as a strategy to promote gender equality
in all its operations. At that time, several agencies working with
the displaced, such as the WFP and UNHCR, already had programs and
structures in place to address the needs of women (rather than gender).
Although there have been challenges in their approaches, over the
years UNHCR and WFP have developed useful tools and analysis on
reaching the displaced, as well as on achieving gender equality
and gender mainstreaming more broadly.
In addition, agencies such as UNFPA and the UN Development Program
are enhancing efforts to bridge their development, humanitarian
and crisis prevention work, including through bolstering attention
to gender equality. In 2007, UNFPA used Resolution 1325 as an entry
point for its conference on women, conflict and displacement (report
forthcoming) to further explore the agency’s work in conflict
settings. Following a detailed review and consultations on its gender
strategy, in 2006 UNDP introduced an Eight-Point Agenda for Women’s
Empowerment and Gender Equality in Crisis Prevention and Recovery
(Agenda). The Agenda references resolution 1325.
DPKO has been working to advance gender mainstreaming in its own
operations, as well as externally with troop contributing countries
and “host” governments. The Department’s work
on gender-based violence, disarmament, demobilization and reintegration
(DDR) in peacekeeping missions may include the participation of
IDPs and returnees. In 2007 the Department released a Policy Directive
on Gender Equality in Peacekeeping Operations, revised its gender
training tools to enhance relevance to the different elements of
its work and management structure, and published two evaluations
on gender mainstreaming in Sierra Leone and Timor Leste.
On the other hand, the UN’s development of strategies and
tools for gender equality and gender mainstreaming has been uneven,
which can impede efforts to effectively reach displaced populations,
and advance peace and security more broadly. While some variety
is necessary in order for strategies to reflect the mandates of
the respective agency or entity, there is now a recognition of the
need for greater system-wide coherence, standards and synergies
in the UN’s work to promote gender equality. Such recommendations
are contained in the UN Secretary-General’s report on Women,
Peace and Security (which reviews the system-wide action plan on
implementation of resolution 1325) and in the report of the Secretary-General’s
High Level Panel on System-Wide Coherence: “Delivering as
One,” released respectively in September and November 2006.
For the full version of this article and references please click
HERE
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Ramina Johal is an advocate and consultant on gender,
displacement and migration. She can be reached at ramina.johal@gmail.com
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WILPF (Australia) letter to Japanese
Ambassador in Canberra concerning Comfort System
14 July 2007
Your Excellency,
We write following the placement of a full-page advertisement
in The Washington Post of 14 June 2007 by a group of Japanese
Members of Parliament and others denying that the Japanese Imperial
Army forced hundreds of thousands of young women and girls into
sexual slavery during World War II.
The advertisement was published under the title, "THE FACTS".
It was signed by professors, journalists, political commentators
and twenty-nine members of the Liberal Democratic Party of Japan,
thirteen from the Democratic Party of Japan and two independents.
In the advertisement, the claim was made that "no historical
document has ever been found by historians or research organisations
that positively demonstrates that women were forced against their
will into prostitution by the Japanese army. The Ianfu (comfort
women) who were embedded with the Japanese army were not, as is
commonly reported, 'sex slaves'. They were working under a system
of licensed prostitution that was commonplace around the world
at the time." The text of the advertisement went on to add
that many of the women made more money than field officers "and
even generals".
We write now on behalf of the Australian Section of the Women's
International League for Peace and Freedom to communicate to you
our profound disappointment at this public denial by MPs of the
actual facts of the horrors endured by the women who were taken
into the Comfort System.
From evidence given by Ms Kim Haksun of South Korea and by Adelaide
woman Ms Jan Ruff O'Herne at the Women's International War Crimes
Tribunal held in Tokyo in December 2000, it is clear that this
was indeed a system of military sexual slavery set up by the Japanese
Imperial Army during WWII.
From evidence at the Tribunal and from speaking with Jan Ruff
O'Herne herself, we well know that under this system, so-called
"comfort stations" were set up wherever Japanese troops
went.
It is now widely and well known that hundreds of thousands of
women and girls throughout Asia under Japanese rule or military
occupation were deceived or abducted into the system. Socially
vulnerable and marginalised women were often the primary targets.
After the war, few came home. Many were killed or simply abandoned
at the end of the war. The few who survived the war were often
kept away from their homes by a sense of shame until at last in
1991 the survivors began to speak out.
These crimes have also been catalogued by the UN Special Rapporteur
on Violence against Women, Radhika Coomaraswamy, in her report
submitted to the United Nations Human Rights Commission in 1996
(E/CN.4/1996/53/Add.1) and also by the UN Special Rapporteur,
Gay J. McDougall, in her report on systematic rape, sexual slavery
and slavery-like practices during armed conflict (E/CN.4/Sub.2/1998/13).
We recall that earlier this year, Prime Minister Abe also claimed
that there was no evidence the Japanese Imperial Army had coerced
the Comfort Women into sexual servitude. However, around the time
of the March 2007 visit of Australian Prime Minister John Howard
to Japan, Mr. Abe stated that he did stand by Japan's 1993 apology
to the Comfort Women. We welcomed this and also Mr. Abe's statement
in late April during a visit to the United States of "deep
sympathy" for the women concerned.
We are of the view that the Government of Japan should take seriously
the sentiments expressed in the United States House of Representatives
Resolution 121 that calls on Japan to account honestly for its
past and to make full reparations to the Comfort Women. As noted
by the House Speaker Nancy Pelosi, although Japan has taken a
leadership role in areas such as the environment and humanitarian
protection, it has not acted with honour in respect of the Comfort
Women.
Your Excellency, in light of these considerations, we respectfully
request that you inform Prime Minister Abe that we would welcome
a statement that he will take positive steps to acknowledge Japan's
responsibility to the thousands of women horribly affected by
the Comfort System.
We would also be grateful if you could communicate to your Government
our view that it is well past the time when the Japanese Government
should pay adequate reparations to the women concerned.
Yours sincerely,
Cathy Picone and Ruth Russell
Joint National Coordinators
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For more information about this statement please contact WILPF’s
Australian section - Email: wilpfaustralia@wilpf.org.au
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Women building peace in the world –the
case of Colombia:
Reflections of the WILPF Delegation to Colombia, July 2007
An international delegation of WILPF members went to Colombia in
the end of July 07 to assess the situation for women within a 1325
context. The delegation supported the concern that the civil population,
and particularly women and young girls make up the majority of those
who are at a disadvantage in Colombia, particularly as internally
displaced individuals who more frequently are the specific target
of attacks by armed groups.
Colombia has one of the largest populations of persons in displacement,
close to 4 million. One of the horrifying aspects is that about
1 million of the 4 million were displaced between 2005-2007, so
the conflict is not lessening, but intensifying. The number of the
dead in the conflict is not known, there is an estimate of 10 000.
Still the Colombian government denies that there is an internal
conflict in the country and ignores the evident humanitarian needs.
The delegation had the opportunity to listen to the representatives
from human rights organisations, unions, women, and the official
entity responsible for the introduction of the policy for women
and gender and particularly to listen to the voices and statement
of women victims and survivors.
To read the full report on this initiative, please click HERE
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A move to change: Building on the principles
of Security Council Resolution 1325
Australian National Committee on Refugee Women (ANCORW), African
Women’s Advocacy Unit
For the last four years, Australia has been actively resettling
refugees from African countries. In 2005, the Australian National
Committee on Refugee Women (ANCORW), a national advocacy and advisory
organization based in Sydney, Australia sought funding to work with
refugee women from Africa in order to further identify and address
some of the issues impacting on their successful resettlement in
Sydney, Australia. Once received from the Department of Immigration
and Citizenship (DIAC), the funds allowed for a small pilot program
to be run for a group of 15 refugee women from various countries
in Africa. The program trained women to work within a human rights
framework, incorporating a gender perspective to resettlement, representation
and advocacy skills. Upon completion, both the ANCORW board and
DIAC worked with graduates to establish links and networks into
the agencies and services, acting as a way to further progress issues
identified by their communities. Thus providing a way to influence
policy and service provision, whilst also enabling them to bring
about change in their situation. A change that would later developed
into ANCORW African Women’s Advocacy Unit (AWAU).
Since it’s conception and the initial training of 15 refugee
women from Sierra Leone, Burundi, Rwanda, Sudan, Uganda and Liberia,
AWAU has successfully identified key issues for their communities
and began negotiation with various government departments and national
agencies to bring about more insight into the issues for refugee
women in resettlement and to offer more ‘durable solutions’
to these issues. In 2006 the graduates were trained in training
methodologies to pass on their skills to a new group of refugee
women from African countries. A new group of 35 refugee women from
African countries have now actively joined AWAU and are working
towards building the refugee women’s voice in resettlement.
To read the full report on this initiative, please
click HERE
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For more Global & Regional Initiatives, please visit:
http://www.peacewomen.org/campaigns/global/index.html
For more Country-specific Initiatives, please visit:
http://www.peacewomen.org/campaigns/countriesindex.html
Engendering Persecution: Refugee Women, Gender-based Violence
and State
Responsibility in South Asia
Oishik Sircar, Women in Security, Conflict management
and Peace (WISCOMP) - Discussion Paper 13 (2007)
This monograph makes a case for the development of "gender
asylum law" in South Asia in order to protect women from myriad
forms of gender-based violence during times of active conflict as
well as times of apparent peace.
For information on how to acquire this publication, please visit
http://www.wiscomp.org/publications.htm
NGO Report on the situation
of internally displaced and refugee women in Kenya for the Committee
on the Elimination of All forms of Discrimination against Women
(CEDAW)
Internal Displacement Monitoring Centre of the Refugee
Council - June 14, 2007
In anticipation of the consideration by the Committee on
the Elimination of Discrimination against Women (“the Committee”)
during its 39th session in July-August 2007 of the combined fifth
and sixth periodic report of Kenya, the IDMC would like to draw
the Committee’s attention to the situation of internally displaced
and refugee women in the country and to a number of substantial
constraints they face in realising the rights enshrined in the Convention
on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women
(“the Convention”).
For the full report, please click
HERE
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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 click HERE
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7.
TRANSLATION UPDATES: CROATIAN
AND HINDI TRANSLATIONS NOW AVAILABLE |
Total number of available
translations: 79
PeaceWomen has recently received Croatian and Hindi translations
of resolution 1325:
The Croatian language is a south Slavic language that is the official
language of the Republic of Croatia. It is also spoken by over half
a million people in Bosnia and Herzegovina and is reasonably understood
in the former Yugoslav republics of Slovenia, Macedonia, Serbia,
and Montenegro.
Hindi is one of the most widely spoken languages in the world. It
is one of the official languages of India and also has many speakers
in Pakistan, Nepal, Bangladesh and other nations.
The Croatian translation of SCR 1325 was completed by Nermina Zecirovic-Arnaud,
a Summer 2007 intern at the PeaceWomen Project.
The Hindi translation was completed by Ms. Seema Thakur, an intern
at the NGO Global Action to Prevent War, who is pursuing her PhD
on the topic "Women, Peace and Security: A Study of the Impact
of United Nations Resolution 1325 in South Asia."
For more information on the translators please click here
Croatian and Hindi are among languages identified as a priority
for translation by women, peace and security advocates. Other languages
currently on this priority list are:
Achehnese (Indonesia)
Acholi/Luo (Northern Uganda, W. Kenya, South Sudan)
Aymara (Bolivia, Peru)
Embera (Colombia)
Hmong (spoken in Laos, Thailand, Burma, Vietnam, and Southern China)
Luganda (Uganda)
Malayalam (South Indian)
Mongolian
Oshiwambo (Namibia)
Paez (Colombia)
Pashto (Afghanistan)
Pidgin (Papua New Guinea)
Quechua (Bolivia, Peru, Ecuador, Northern Chile, Argentina, Southern
Colombia)
Romani (or Romany)
Sangho (Central African Republic)
Shilook (Sudan)
Wayu (Venezuela)
Wayunaiki (Colombia)
Xhosa (S. Africa)
Zande (Sudan)
Zulu (S. Africa)
If you know of existing translations of 1325 in any of the above
languages, or would like to volunteer as a translator, suggest potential
translators or add languages to this list, please contact milkah@peacewomen.org
To view the 79 translations, click HERE
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USING 1325 IN TRANSLATION” INITIATIVE
PeaceWomen continues to solicit information on how translations
of the resolution are being used and the impact of the availability
of these translations on the work of women peace and security advocates.
We invite anyone who has used translations of 1325 for outreach,
advocacy or other purposes, or who may know how translations of
the resolution are being used to provide us with information detailing
among other things:
1. Which particular translation(s) of 1325 you have used or know
is being used
2. Who carried out the translation (if known) or how the translation(s)
was accessed
3. The types of activities for which this translation(s) has been
used (e.g. workshops, radio programs) and your opinion about the
impact of such activities in promoting resolution 1325
4. What you believe to be the importance of translating Resolution
1325 into local languages
5. Ideas on languages which may require a 1325 translation and whether
you or anyone you know may be interested translating the resolution
Kindly contribute to the “Using 1325 in Translation”
effort by responding to these questions or submitting any other
information on translating UNSCR 1325 to info@peacewomen.org
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For more information on the “using 1325 in translation”
initiative, please click HERE
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8.
GENDER AND PEACEKEEPING UPDATE
|
PEACEKEEPING WATCH
U.N. WARNS MOROCCANS ON SEX ABUSE
23 July 2007 - (AP) The United Nations is investigating Moroccan
peacekeepers suspected of sexually abusing girls under age 18
in Ivory Coast and possibly leaving some of them pregnant, a U.N.
spokeswoman said Sunday.
RECOMMENDATIONS
ON PEACEKEEPING OPERATIONS APPROVED BY FOURTH COMMITTEE, INCLUDING
PROPOSED ‘UNITED NATIONS STANDARDS OF CONDUCT
17 July 2007 - (UN Press release) The Fourth Committee (Special
Political and Decolonization) this morning approved the proposals
and recommendations of the Special Committee on Peacekeeping Operations
contained in its annual report, and recommended that United Nations
standards of conduct be included in the revised draft model memorandum
of understanding between the United Nations and troop contributing
countries.
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GENDER AND PEACEKEEPING
RESOURCES
Peacekeeping to Peacebuilding: Lessons from the Past, Building
for the Future
United Nations Association of Canada March 2007 -
Chapter 7 of the UNA - Canada Report "Peacekeeping and Peacebuilding"
focuses on “Women’s Issues in Peacekeeping and Peacebuilding”
and derives from a UNA-Canada public dialogue on Canada’s
commitment to gender perspectives in UN Peacekeeping. Among the
themes explored were the various roles of women in post-conflict
societies and the importance of bringing a gendered approach to
the institution of peacekeeping.
To read the chapter, please click HERE
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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
NGOWG and
OSCE Partner in Workshops on National Level Implementation of SCR
1325 in Central Asia
The consequences of women’s exclusion and marginalization
pose a significant threat to human security and sustainable peace
and development. These consequences are far-reaching and manifest
into core security risks such as the absence of legal and human
rights, lack of protection against gender-based violence, lack of
access to justice, health, education, and exclusion from participation
in economic life, credit, land and natural resources. They not only
constitute underlying sources of political and economic instability,
but also result in the weakening of social and family units and
the welfare of communities as a whole.
Including women’s needs and priorities in peace and security
policy is critical, to ensure representation, inclusivity and participation
of all members of the population. However, just as important is
the effective implementation of gender policy and analysis that
takes not only women into consideration, but critically examines
the different roles, needs, interests and capacities of both men
and women, girls and boys.
With this in mind, the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace and Security
and the Organization for Cooperation and Security in Europe (OSCE)
are currently partnering to conduct a series of Training Workshops
on National Level Implementation of UNSCR 1325 in Central Asia as
a follow-up to the Regional Roundtable on SCR 1325 held by the OSCE
in Kazackstan in September 2006.
The first workshop, conducted in Bishkek, Kyrgysztan in June, brought
together government, civil society actors and gender experts from
around the country to build on key issues in relation to gender,
women and human security from a national perspective. Within this
context, the workshop reviewed the provisions of UNSCR 1325, and
participants identified possible priority areas for national-level
implementation, with the aim of taking concrete steps forward in
advancing the domestication of UNSCR 1325 in Kyrgyzstan.
Five key priority areas in regard to gender and security in Kyrgysztan
were identified: Political Participation; Economic Insecurity; Human
Trafficking/Migration; Violence against Women/ Physical Insecurity;
Religion and Cultural Tradition. In addition to these priority areas,
the needs of rural populations and the rule of law were identified
as cross-cutting themes.
In order to advance gender and security issues at the national level,
the participants formed a national Working Group on Gender, Peace
and Security at the end of the two-day workshop to take their recommendations
forward, with the immediate aim of incorporating gender and security
elements into the National Action Plan on Gender Equality which
will be finalized on 3 July 2007. The Working Group is comprised
of both government and civil society representatives nominated and
elected by the workshop participants. The members of the national
Working Group plan to collaborate to further identify, develop and
refine strategies for enhancing the integration of gender into key
security priority areas at the national level, in line with the
implementation of UNSCR 1325.
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For more information on the NGOWG & its events visit: http://www.womenpeacesecurity.org/
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10.
WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY CALENDAR |
Convention on the Elimination
of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW)
39th Session of the CEDAW Committee
July 23 - August 10 2007, UN Headquarters, New York
For three weeks, the CEDAW committee of experts and state delegations
will discuss reports on the implementation of CEDAW in the Cook
Islands, Belize, Brazil, Estonia, Guinea, Honduras, Hungary, Indonesia,
Jordan, Kenya, Liechtenstein, New Zealand, Norway, Republic of Korea
and Singapore.
For more information, please visit http://www.un.org/womenwatch/daw/cedaw/39sess.htm
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Women: Agents for Change
29th International Federation of University Women Conference
10 –16 August 2007, Manchester, United Kingdom
The week long conference brings together academics, UN experts and
officials and policy makers to discuss a range of global issues
including education, information society, human security and peace,
particularly with respect to Millennium Development Goals. Speakers
include Mary Robinson, Elisabeth Rehn and Salma Khan.
For more information, please visit http://www.ifuw.org/ifuw2007/
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Gender and Militarism Seminar
New Profile and War Resisters' International (WRI)
23-26 August 2007, Israel
This Gender and Militarism Seminar, to be held in Israel in August
2007, will bring together activists and academics from all over
the world to study the mutual connections between militarism and
gender.
For more information, visit, http://www.wri-irg.org/news/2007/council2007-en.htm
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UPEACE Short Courses : Gender Studies and Peacebuilding
19 September to 9 October 2007, Costa Rica
Deadline for applications - 31 August 2007
The United Nations affiliated University for Peace (UPEACE), based
in Costa Rica, announces , its forthcoming short course on Gender
and Peacebuilding. The course offers a combination of theoretical
knowledge and practical skills, incorporating historic and current
events from around the world. The course will be taught in an intensive
three-week periods requiring 45 hours of class work under the guidance
of a highly qualified professor.
For more information, please visit
http://www.upeace.org/
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For the complete calendar, CLICK
HERE.
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