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1325
PEACEWOMEN E-NEWS
Issue #30
5 September 2003
Security
Council Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace and Security was passed
on October 31, 2000. For the text of the resolution click
here.
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 edition of the 1325 PeaceWomen E-News Features:
1. 1325 News
2. Women, War and Peace Web Portal
3. Feature Statement: The Golden Tulip Declaration
of Liberian Women Attending the Peace Talks in Accra Ghana
4. Feature Initiative: International Women's
Commission
5. Feature Resource: BRIDGE Bulletin on Gender
and Armed Conflict
6. Calendar Events
If
you would like to fill out the 1325 PeaceWomen E-News evaluation
form in either English or French, please write to 1325news@peacewomen.org
and we will send you the questionnaire by email.
Visit
our updated news pages on Afghanistan,
Democratic Republic
of Congo, Iraq,
Israel-Palestine
and Liberia
Women's
Rights Goal of Meeting in Former Taliban Stronghold
September 3, 2003 (Globe and Mail - Toronto) Kandahar, the
spiritual home of a regime that barred women from work and education,
is not the first city that springs to mind as a host for a gender-equality
rally.
Canadian Perspectives on Gender, Conflict and Security: Advancing
Research, Advocacy and Policy - Workshop
September 1, 2003 - A workshop called Canadian Perspectives
on Gender, Conflict and Security: Advancing Research, Advocacy and
Policy was held August 25th and 26th at the York University
Centre for International and Security Studies in Toronto, Canada.
The workshop brought together Canadian researchers - academic, activist
and government - working within the area of Security Council Resolution
1325 to assess the current state of art of this work, and identify
research/advocacy resources, as well as gaps and strategies for
moving Canadian foreign policies in the area of Resolution 1325
forward. The organization of the workshop involved six sessions
and each begun with informal, kickoff speakers and thematic guiding
questions. Two reports are being produced from the workshop: a policy
paper is being formulated for the Canadian policy community and
then a conference report is being generated which will be widely
distributed in the upcoming months. If you have further questions
about the workshop please contact: Suzanne Taylor- Forbes at suzzanne@peacebuild.ca.
Mano
River Women's Peace Network (MARWOPNET) Signs on Peace Agreement
in Akosombo
August 29, 2003 (MARWOPNET Press Release - Liberia) A delegation
of eight women from the Liberia Chapter of the Mano River Women's
Peace Network (MARWOPNET) led by Mrs. Ruth Sando Perry, former Liberian
Head of State, and Mrs. Theresa Leigh-Sherman, Vice-President of
MARWOPNET, has been participating for the last two months in the
Liberia peace talks held in Akosombo, Ghana.
Kenyan
And Rwandan Women Learn Political Empowerment Skills
August 28, 2003 (United States Department of State) "A
woman's way of leading is different from that of men, it is much
more inclusive, much more dependent on collaborating and networking,"
one of a small number of women members of parliament in Kenya, told
the Washington File. Esther Keino, a graduate of Harvard University,
was one of eight women leaders from Kenya and Rwanda who gathered
on Maryland's Eastern Shore recently to learn key political leadership
skills as well as how to train and empower other African women to
use those skills when they return home.
Mobile
Female Lead Teams to Support Women and Children in Northern Iraq
August 28, 2003 (WADI e.V) The German WADI, which is working
in Northern Iraq since 1993, is supporting female lead Mobile Teams
both in Suleymaniah, Kirkuk and Arbil and Mosul Gouvernarate. These
teams contain of Medical Assistants, Social Workers and Supervisors.
On daily base they visit women and children in different areas,
offer basic health services, conduct awareness' courses, visit women,
who suffer from distress and if needed bring them to one of the
protection centres or shelters for Women in Distress WADI is supporting
in the Area. Different researches and questionnaires about female
victims of Baathism, Anfal Widows and female led families were conducted.
Ijaw
Women Condemn Warri Crisis, Blame Government
August 26, 2003 (Vanguard Lagos) Ijaw women of Niger
Delta have condemned the renewed spate of violence in Warri and
blamed the federal and Delta state governments for not putting a
stop to the unending crisis.
More
than 400 Iraqi Women Kidnapped, Raped in Post--War Chaos: Watchdog
August 24, 2003 - (AFP) More than 400 Iraqi women have been kidnapped
and raped amid the lawlessness gripping the country since the ouster
of Saddam Hussein, the Organisation of Women's Freedom in Iraq said
Sunday.
Zimbabwe
Women Bear Brunt of State Sponsored Violence
August 19, 2003 (Daily News) In 18 months, Amani Trust, a
non-governmental organisation (NGO) dedicated to the assistance
of victims of violence in Zimbabwe, has documented 16 cases of rape.
Sixteen - not even one a month. Not enough to make the case for
the systematic rape of women during Zimbabwe's political crisis.
Not enough to make anyone sit up and take notice. However, this
relatively small number belies the degree to which women have been
and continue to be targeted in the continuing political violence.
For
more 1325 news, click
here.
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2.WOMEN,
WAR AND PEACE WEB PORTAL
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Launch Date: October 31, 2003
The PeaceWomen Project is joining the United Nations Development
Fund for Women (UNIFEM) in a web partnership on their Women, War
and Peace Web Portal, which will be launched October 31, 2003. The
web portal is intended to promote a systematic flow of accurate
and timely information about the impact of armed conflict on women
and womens role in peace-building to, and among, national
and international actors working on these issues.
Through the web portal partnership, UNIFEM and PeaceWomen will together
feature key women, peace and security themes (see Themes
listed below) and gender analysis of armed conflict situations in
the profiles of more than 50 countries (see Countries
listed below).
In this partnership, the PeaceWomen site will host:
NEWS: Timely country-specific news stories about women, peace
and security issues from the 52 countries profiled.
PEACEBUILDING INITIATIVES: A regularly updated compilation
of womens peace-building initiatives in-country and at the
international and regional levels.
- The compilation will feature initiatives that
are currently being organized by women, and women and men in partnership,
on conflict prevention, peace building, refugees, reconstruction,
rehabilitation, disarmament, demobilization, transitional justice,
violence against women on armed conflicts, HIV/AIDS in the context
of war, and peace education.
DATABASE OF ORGANIZATIONS: A database of
womens organizations, in-country and at the international
and regional levels, working on peace and security issues, including
detailed contact information;
RESOURCES: Links to NGO, UN and governmental resources
analyses, statements, and reports on the 52 countries profiled
and thematic issues profiled.
While the PeaceWomen team is working with the information and the
information sources that already exist on www.peacewomen.org, we
are of course also looking for a wider breadth of sources and information.
We are thus asking for input from other organizations regarding
which news sources and stories, initiatives, organizations and women,
peace and security resources should be included on the PeaceWomen
website as part of the UNIFEM web portal.
Please send news sources and listservs to sarah@peacewomen.org.
Please send any contact information for organizations working
on women, peace and security issues, and any resources- civil
society and NGO reports and statements, UN reports, governmental
reports, books and articles- that you believe need to be included
to kara@peacewomen.org.
If your organization or any partner organization has organized,
or is currently organizing initiatives on the aforementioned
issues, we welcome any description, stories or key findings from
your experience for inclusion in our compilation. Please send any
information to Lupe Bardelli at lupeb@peacewomen.org.
In addition, if there are countries which you believe ought
to be profiled which are not listed below, PeaceWomen will gladly
consider adding them to the list. Please send any country suggestions
or comments about our country list to info@peacewomen.org.
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Below are listed the themes and countries that will be featured
on PeaceWomen.org for the web partnership with the UNIFEM Women,
War and Peace Web Portal:
THEMES:
Violence, Trafficking, Peacekeeping, Justice, Peace Negotiations,
Human Rights, Human Security, Disarmament, Demobilization and Reintegration
(DDR), Early Warning, Prevention, Landmines, Elections, Reconstruction,
Small Arms and Light Weapons (SALW), Displacement, Health and HIV/AIDS,
Organizing for Peace, Economic Rights, Racial Discrimination.
COUNTRIES:
AFRICA
North Africa: Western Sahara
West Africa: Cote D'Ivoire, Ghana, Guinea-Bissau, Liberia,
Nigeria, Sierra Leone
Great Lakes: Burundi, Central African Republic (CAR), Democratic
Republic of Congo (DRC), Rwanda, Uganda
East Africa/Horn: Ethiopia/Eritrea, Somalia, Sudan
Southern Africa: Angola, Namibia, South Africa, Zimbabwe
CENTRAL AND EASTERN EUROPE (CEE): Albania, Bosnia and Herzegovina,
Chechnya, Cyprus, Georgia, Kosovo, Macedonia, Tajikistan
CENTRAL/ SOUTH AMERICA: Brazil, Colombia, El Salvador, Guatemala,
Honduras, Nicaragua, Peru
CARIBBEAN: Haiti
EAST ASIA: Korean Peninsula
SOUTH ASIA: Burma Myanmar, Cambodia, India/Pakistan,
Kashmir, Nepal, Sri Lanka
SOUTH EAST ASIA/PACIFIC: Acheh (Indonesia), Bougainville
(Papua New Guinea), Fiji, Solomon Islands, South Sulawesi and Malaca
(Indonesia), Timor-Leste, Vanuatu
WEST ASIA: Afghanistan, Iraq, Israel/Occupied Palestinian
Territories (OPT), Lebanon
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The Golden Tulip Declaration of Liberian Women
Attending the Peace Talks in Accra Ghana
August 15, 2003
Included below is the full Golden Tulip declaration, written and
adopted by representatives of various Liberian womens organizations,
attending the Liberian peace talks, at the Golden Tulip Hotel in
Accra, Ghana:
Preamble
We, the representatives of the various Liberian Womens Organizations
at the Accra Peace Talks on Liberia held a one-day Strategic Planning
Meeting under the Chairmanship of Her Excellency Madame Ruth Sando
Perry on Friday 15th Day of August A.D. 2003 at the Golden Tulip
Hotel in Accra to analyse lessons learnt at the Accra Peace Talks
from 4 June 2003 to present and to strategize on the inclusion of
women within all existing and proposed institutions including all
components of the current and in-coming Liberian Government (Executive,
Legislative and Judiciary) and within all structures to lead the
post conflict peace building process.
- Cognizant of women constituting approximately
51.2 percent of the Liberian population;
- Recognizing the numerous contributions of Liberian
women to the socio-economic development and the political and
peace processes;
- Noting the continuous exclusion and low participation
of women from decision-making bodies;
- Recalling UN Resolution 1325 relative to the
incorporation of a gender perspective into peace keeping and in
the participation of women in the peace negotiation and post conflict
reconstruction do hereby resolve as follows:
1. Greater participation of women in peace keeping
missions as well as the disarmament, demobilization and reintegration
process;
2. More participation of women in the on going peace process;
3. Awareness and sensitisation meetings by rural and urban women,
youth and combatants to lay down their arms;
4. Women leaders who are currently observers at the Accra Peace
Talks be made delegates and be given voting rights including places
on the Vetting Committee;
5. Lobby all parties including the facilitators at the Peace Talks
in Accra for 50% representation of women in the Transitional Leadership;
6. Encourage all women to support women candidates;
7. Women organization in Liberia be supported and empowered by the
Government of Liberia, UNAIDS, and UNIFEM to actively participate
in the implementation of all activities involving the prevention
and control of HIV/AIDS during the post conflict process;
8. Liberian women be integrated and supported in all decision-making
policies on HIV/AIDS prevention and control (National and International);
9. Recognition and empowerment of delegates to the Golden Tulip
Consultative and Strategic Planning meeting as a core group for
the inclusion of women in
the process of rehabilitation, reconstruction and redevelopment
of Liberia;
10. Establishing contacts with existing donor agencies to support
skills training and micro credit program to address humanitarian
concerns;
11. UNIFEM and partners to support a Workshop in the coming periods
in Monrovia.
It was unanimously agreed that UNIFEM be mandated to empower and
support the efforts and results arising out of this Consultative
and Strategic Planning Meeting and also establish a follow up committee
to ensure implementation of the recommendations and decisions emanating
from the Accra meeting and beyond. In this regards, a Peace and
Security Program will be formulated to support Liberian womens
initiatives for the coming periods in Liberia.
For the full declaration, which includes the distribution list,
click
here.
A Comprehensive Peace Agreement was signed between the Government
of Liberia, the Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy
(LURD), the Movement for Democracy in Liberia (MODEL) and Liberias
18 political parties on August 18, 2003 in Accra, Ghana. To read
the full agreement, click
here (ReliebWeb).
A delegation of eight women from the Liberia Chapter of the Mano
River Women's Peace Network (MARWOPNET) participated in the peace
talks as observers; they were the only women's group that received
accreditation to the conference. To read a MARWOPNET press release
about their involvement in the peace talks (included in 1325
News above), click
here.
PeaceWomen looks forward to including your and other organizations
analyses on the integration of gender concerns in the Comprehensive
Peace Agreement and recent peace negotiations in future issues of
the newsletter.
For
a comprehensive annotated bibliography of books, articles and analyses
on women's peace theory and activities, as well as NGO position
papers, reports, speeches, statements and tools for organisational
building, click
here.
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The International Womens Commission (IWC)
Israel-Occupied Palestinian Territories
Palestinian and Israeli women's organizations, including Women's
Center for Legal Aid and Counselling in Jerusalem and Bat Shalom,
are collaborating on an initiative, called the International Women's
Commission (IWC). Women have initiated this type of political body
to address the historical absence of women from the formal negotiations
and to ensure women's active participation in the Israeli-Palestinian
peace processes. The Commission is being developed with the objective
of being recognized by the Quartet (UN, EU, US and Russia), under
the mandate of UNSC Resolution 1325.
The creation of the Commission will allow the Israeli, Palestinian
and international women representatives and negotiators to reframe
the divisive issues, sustain political will for and popular support
of negotiations, and build bridges between traditionally antagonistic
sides in order to ensure a genuine commitment to a sustainable peace.
It is hoped that this body will ensure that women's input and a
gender perspective will be incorporated into any binding agreements,
so as to guarantee a more representative and equitable substantive
result. Two key concerns that must be further addressed by the organizers
and Israeli and Palestinian women, respectively, include: the degree
and make-up of representation afforded for Israeli, Palestinian
and international women in the Commission and the most suitable
partner within the Quartet to host the Commission as a formal political
body.
A working document on the Commission has been circulated at town
hall meetings in Tel Aviv, Jerusalem and Nazareth. Approximately
100 women attended the three town hall meetings. In the near future,
there also will be town hall meetings held in the Occupied Palestinian
Territories.
Due to the on-going hostilities, the International Women's Commission
cannot sufficiently progress forward, just as the Roadmap processes
cannot. The international community, and particularly the women
involved in the international women's movement, must support the
work of Israeli and Palestinian women within an international law
framework, including UNSC Resolution 1325.
WOMEN'S CENTRE FOR LEGAL AID AND COUNSELLING
Al Dahya Intersection
Al Hirbawi Building, Third Floor
P.O. Box 54262
Jerusalem 91516
phone: 972 2 2347438
e-mail: wclac@netvision.net.il
BAT SHALOM
Northern Office: P.O.B 2740
Afula 18126
Israel
phone: 972 4 640 7011
email: batshalomtzafon@hotmail.com
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Gender and Development In Brief: Gender and Armed
Conflict (Issue 13)
BRIDGE Bulletin, Institute of Development Studies, University
of Sussex
August 2003
A gender analysis of armed conflict and its aftermath reveals
distinct types of hidden disadvantage that worsen gender relations.
Given that gender inequality pre-dates conflict, it is disproportionately
womens disadvantage that is hidden. But this does not mean
that men are always the winners. The need to recognise womens
experiences and address the impact on gender relations led to the
establishment of the Gender Programme of the Truth and Reconciliation
Commission of Peru (CVR). The CVRs activities promoted gender
equality as central to preventing future outbreaks of violence.
The Womens Centre for Legal Aid and Counselling (WCLAC) in
Palestine also works to recognise the contribution of women and
the importance of gender equality as essential to the resolution
of conflict and the establishment of peace in the occupied territories.
The articles included in this issue are:
- Tackling gender inequality for long-term peace, by
Lata Narayanaswamy, BRIDGE
- Gender in Perus Truth and Reconciliation Commission,
by Julissa Mantilla, Gender Programme, Legal Division of the Truth
and Reconciliation Commission of Peru (CVR)
- Promoting womens human rights in the midst of conflict,
by Soraida Abed Hussein, Head of Legal Literacy and Training Unit,
The Palestinian Womens Centre for Legal Aid and Counselling
(WCLAC)
This issue is available online at: http://www.ids.ac.uk/bridge/dgb13.html.
BRIDGE has also produced a Cutting Edge Pack on Gender and Armed
Conflict. In addition to the bulletin, the pack includes:
- Overview Report outlining the main issues, examples of good practice
and recommendations
- Supporting Resources Collection including summaries of key texts,
case studies, tools, and online resources, and contact details of
relevant organizations.
For the Cutting Edge Pack, visit: http://www.ids.ac.uk/bridge/reports_gend_CEP.html
To read this issue in French and Spanish, visit: http://www.ids.ac.uk/bridge/reports_gend_CEP.html
To receive a hard copy version of this issue, contact bridge@ids.ac.uk.
Other issues of In Brief are available at: http://www.ids.ac.uk/bridge/Bri_bull.html
For
a comprehensive annotated bibliography of books, articles and analyses
on women's peace theory and activities, as well as NGO position
papers, reports, speeches, statements and tools for organisational
building, click
here.
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Women in Black Regional Conference
September 20 2003, 10:00 a.m. - 6:30 p.m., Frederick, Maryland,
USA
Registration deadline: September 10
Frederick, Maryland Women In Black (WIB) is organizing the first
ever Women in Black conference in the US. The Conference will include
a presentation of the history of WIB, reports from WIB chapters,
a WIB international conference report, and a walking vigil in War
Memorial Park. The conference will be hosted by Fahima Vorgetts
of Women for Afghan Women and Anne Brodsky, author of With All
Our Strength: The Revolutionary Association of the Women of Afghanistan.
For more information, contact: Andrea Norouzi at 301/834-7581,
wibfrederick@mizmail.com,
or andibonita@earthlink.net.
Women, War and Peace Seminar
October 3, 2003, 1.45 pm 5 pm, Friends Meeting House,
London, England
The National Council of Women of Great Britain, Foreign Affairs
Committee will host the Women, War and Peace Seminar to consider
the difficulties of women in post-conflict situations in Rwanda,
Iraq and Afghanistan and the importance of the implementation of
United Nations SC Resolution 1325. Presentations will be given by:
HE Rosemary Museminali, Ambassador to the United Kingdom; Nazaneen
Rashid, Field Officer Kurdish Disaster Fund; Karen Wolstenholme,
Foreign and Commonwealth Office; and Hilary Page MBE, UNIFEM UK.
Lois Hainsworth will chair the seminar. For more information, contact
Jane Cooper at: 01732 459014.
Clash or Consensus: Gender and Human Security in a Globalized
World
October 8-9, 2003, Kenney Auditorium, The School of Advanced International
Studies, Johns Hopkins University, Washington, DC, USA
Womens Learning Partnership (WLP) has organized this conference
to provide a forum for women leaders and human security experts
from the Global South, particularly from Muslim societies, to come
together to discuss and strategize on ways to advance human security
around the world. Panel discussions and strategy sessions will provide
an opportunity for participants to identify the conditions needed
under which citizens can live in safety, peace and dignity, exercise
their fundamental right to health, education and well-being, exert
the freedom to choose, and participate fully in governance. For
more information and to register, visit WLP at: http://www.learningpartnership.org/events/2003/03clashorconsensus.phtml,
call (1) 301-654-2774, or fax (1) 301-654-2775.
For
the complete calendar items as well as more calendar events, click
here.
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