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Senior UN officials call on Member
States to address rape as a weapon of war
22 October 2007 – (UN News) On the eve of
a Security Council debate on the role of women in peace and security,
two senior United Nations officials have stressed the need to combat
gender-based violence and to ensure that violations of women’s
rights, including the use of rape as a weapon of war, are viewed
as a security issue.
“The woman’s body has become a battleground
and it seems to be taken for granted that this should continue,”
Rachel Mayanja, the Secretary-General’s Special Adviser on
Gender Issues and Advancement of Women, said at a press briefing
at UN Headquarters, stressing the responsibility of Member States
to address the question of rape.
Tomorrow the 15-member Council is set to discuss
progress in implementing resolution 1325, a landmark document adopted
in 2000 which recognizes the contribution of women to the maintenance
and promotion of peace and security, while acknowledging their specific
needs and concerns in armed conflict and its aftermath.
The resolution calls in particular for measures
to protect women from gender-based violence, including rape and
other forms of sexual abuse.
“The most serious sign of inadequate implementation
is the phenomenon of sexual violence as a weapon of war,”
stated Joanne Sandler, acting Executive Director of the UN Development
Fund for Women (UNIFEM).
“It is absolutely essential that the Council
takes this up, particularly the issue of remedial measures, of judicial
response and of prevention,” she added.
The use of rape as a weapon of conflict has been denounced by numerous
UN officials, including the world body’s humanitarian chief.
Briefing the Council last month after returning
from the Democratic Republic of the Congo (DRC), where serious humanitarian
problems remain even after the end of major fighting in most of
the country, Under-Secretary-General for Humanitarian Affairs John
Holmes reported that “brutal sexual violence is a particularly
horrific feature of the DRC.”
“For many victims, registering a case and
speaking out means almost certain ostracism by their own family
and community,” he told the Council. “In any case, the
chances of redress in a situation of virtually total impunity are
close to zero.”
Stating that reports of rape in different conflict
areas, particularly the DRC, are “just the tip of the iceberg,”
Ms. Sandler called on the Council and Member States to address such
violations.
“It’s a security issue that needs the
Council’s attention not once a year but much more frequently
than that so that we can have the kind of action and response that
is required.”
From:http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=24373&Cr=women&Cr1=
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