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UNSC RESOLUTION 1325
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Kenya: Kaari Betty Murungi: Pioneering Kenya peace advocate
December 1 2005 - (Urgent Action Fund)
Hon. Wangari Maathai blazed the trail for African and Kenyan women
in regard to international recognition for peace activism. Betty
Kaari Murungi has now followed in those footsteps. On November 11th
2005, in New York, Betty received the annual International Advocate
for Peace Award which honours individuals who embody passion through
their work in international conflict resolution. This award was
founded by the Cardozo Journal of Conflict Resolution which draws
its name from former U.S. Supreme Court Justice, Benjamin N. Cardozo,
who was renowned for his integrity and social consciousness.
Betty Murungi accepted this award, whose past recipients include
Archbishop Desmond Tutu and former US President Bill Clinton, on
behalf of all the women of the Continent and particularly those
whose lives have been permanently scarred by conflict – where
through sexual violence, abduction and sexual slavery their bodies
became the battleground over which the conflicts were fought. They
are the unsung peace activists who often put aside their own suffering
as they work for peace and justice. Her award celebrates the indefatigable,
creative and innovative efforts by women on how to achieve and maintain
peace – from the Women in Black movement founded by Israeli
women and quickly and spontaneously duplicated around the world
as a forum to say no to war and injustice - to the Sixth Clan initiative
by Somali Women, to ensure their inclusion in peace negotiations
to end the conflict in their country.
Ms. Murungi’s award is in recognition of her work in international
conflict resolution and particularly in regard to justice for women
in post-conflict justice mechanisms such as the Special Tribunal
for Sierra Leone and the International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda.
It also recognises her work as part of the Women’s Caucus
for Gender Justice, in advocating for the inclusion of a gender
perspective in the International Criminal Court (ICC) – leading
to an explicit inclusion of rape and other crimes of sexual and
gender violence as war crimes and crimes against humanity, and measures
to ensure participation and appropriate protection of victims and
witnesses in the Court’s processes. As the ICC now undertakes
investigations in DRC, Northern Uganda and Darfur in Sudan, all
areas in which there have been rampant, vicious and insidious acts
of sexual violence against women, a gendered approach by the Court
should translate into huge gains for the women in so far as redress
and justice for the crimes against them.
From: http://www.pambazuka.org/index.php?id=30687
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