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WOMEN ARE REGION'S PEACEMAKERS,
BUT EXCLUDED FROM LEADERSHIP
March 9, 2004 (The Sydney Morning Herald) In the South Pacific,
it is often women who suffer the most during and after the conflict,
writes Elsina Wainwright.
Women in the South Pacific face many challenges. In Melanesia conflict
and political instability exacerbate their situation. In the Solomon
Islands, women faced ethnic conflict and then lawlessness as armed
gangs held sway before last year's Australian-led Regional Assistance
Mission.
In Bougainville, women have endured the horrors of civil war, including
rape and other violence. In Fiji, the 1987 and 2000 coups brought
instability, damaged the economy, and fanned ethnic tensions.
When instability and conflict prevail, it is too often the women
who suffer the most. And fresh problems arise in post-conflict societies
like Bougainville and Solomon Islands.
Many men used to the status they gained from war and weapons have
trouble reintegrating into a fragile postwar society with few employment
opportunities. Too often they take their frustration out on their
wives and children. Alcohol abuse increases, and domestic violence
rates rise.
This situation is compounded by the dominance of men in traditional
South Pacific society. Men are the public decision-makers and political
leaders. If women exert any influence, it is behind the scenes.
The Solomon Islands pidgin word for "husband" is "boss".
Women in Melanesia are also affected by the inadequate delivery
of services such as health and education, particularly in isolated
areas.
In PNG the problem is acute, where service delivery has ground to
a virtual halt in some parts of the Highlands.
Notwithstanding all these challenges, South Pacific women have played
a critical role in ending conflict and building peace. In Bougainville
in the 1990s, women came together to promote peace and reconciliation,
often putting themselves in danger to tell the men to stop the fighting.
In the Solomon, women in the capital Honiara interposed themselves
between the two militias for weeks in an effort to end the conflict.
They formed the Women for Peace Group, which worked with militia
groups, the government and others to promote peace in 2000. It is
now internationally recognised that women are often best placed
to act as peacemakers in war-torn or insecure societies. But this
crucial role in ending conflict and building peace has not translated
into a greater role for women in the formal peace processes, or
in the post-conflict society.
In Bougainville, women were relegated to the sidelines of the peace
talks, and have been marginalised in the autonomy process. In the
Solomon Islands, women were in large part excluded from discussions
once ethnic conflict ended in 2000. It is imperative that South
Pacific women acquire a leadership role in the formal peace processes
and in their societies.
South Pacific women's groups are working to improve women's status
in society, and a lot is being done to assist South Pacific women
to play a greater leadership role. UNIFEM, the UN's development
fund for women, is working to raise awareness of women's constitutional
rights and to encourage women to take leadership roles.
AusAID and many non-governmental organisations are doing much to
improve the lives of women in the region. It is important that women
continue to be deployed on assistance missions - as police, for
example, or lawyers or financial experts. They serve as role models
for the women in that society, and send an important signal to the
men. One of the lessons from East Timor and Bosnia is that women
prefer relaying their conflict experiences to other women.
Australians over the past decade or two have largely forgotten the
South Pacific. We tend to know more about Europe, the US and the
Middle East than we do about our neighbours. That needs to change.
Last year the Australian Government turned its attention back to
the South Pacific. It is time for all Australians to reconnect with
the region. We need to re-establish people-to-people links with
the South Pacific, including business to business, student to student,
and also women to women.
International Women's Day is a day to rejoice in how far women have
come, to remind ourselves how far we have to go, and to redouble
our efforts to assist other women around the world to have peaceful,
prosperous futures.
Dr Elsina Wainwright, from the Australian Strategic Policy Institute,
was guest speaker at UNIFEM's International Women's Day Breakfast
in Sydney yesterday. These are her personal views.
From: http://www.smh.com.au/index.html
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