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More women needed in global peacekeeping
operations: UN-backed conference
March 29, 2006 – (UN News) Describing the current low numbers
of women in United Nations peacekeeping operations as “disheartening,”
a United Nations-backed conference called today for their number
to be doubled every year for the next few years, saying this would
not only improve the efficiency of peacekeeping but also its credibility.
Comfort Lamptey, Gender Adviser of the Department of Peacekeeping
Operations (DPKO), told reporters on the second day of a landmark
two-day meeting to discuss gender disparity in peacekeeping that
currently only one per cent of military personnel were women, while
only four per cent of the police were women.
“Our current picture is rather disheartening…women only
constitute 746 military personnel and the male peacekeepers are
63,862; and in the case of the police, women only make up 314 of
the personnel we have worldwide out of 7,408,” Ms. Lamptey
said, explaining why the UN called for the meeting with troop and
police contributing countries.“We are asking Member States
to double the numbers of women being deployed every year for the
next few years, and that they also as a monitoring mechanism disaggregate:
we want to make sure that in all reporting that we do that the statistics
on women and men deployed are disaggregated, because right now we
don’t say…how many women are actually deployed.”
Echoing Ms. Lamptey’s remarks, Ambassador Nana Effah-Apenteng
of Ghana – one of the co-chairs of the meeting – said
the fact that this was the first such gathering to discuss gender
disparity in peacekeeping showed that the issue “had not been
given much priority by Member States.”“It is clear that
we cannot afford to do business as usual as it is undermining both
our credibility and our efficiency in the field,” he said,
adding that as peacekeeping operations become more multi-dimensional
so “greater representation of women is necessary to strengthen
the implementation of Mission mandates.”
Antero Lopes, the Deputy UN Police Adviser, also acknowledged the
gender disparity in global police operations, but he said that some
progress had been made toward redressing the situation.“In
the local police services which are being reformed by the UN police
in Sierra Leone and Timor Leste, we have both 25 per cent of female
representation; in Liberia, we have a little bit lower; in UNMIK
(UN Mission in Kosovo) the current figure is 14 per cent,”
he told reporters. Mr. Lopes also said that through various advocacy
initiatives, the UN’s Police Adviser was able to engage more
and more Member States, and because of this India had committed
to deploying a 125-strong all-female police unit, while Jordan recently
said that for the first time it would deploy four female police
officers.
From: URL: http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=17992&Cr=peacekeep&Cr1=
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