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RESOLUTION 1325
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UN MARKS 10TH ANNIVERSARY OF FUND
TO END VIOLENCE AGAINST WOMEN
WITH CALL FOR ACTION
February 16,
2007 – (UN News) Senior United Nations officials today marked
the tenth anniversary of the creation of the United Nations Trust
Fund to End Violence against Women with praise for its accomplishments
and a call for more action.
“Today is not only an occasion to celebrate. It is also an
opportunity to renew and redouble our efforts,” said Deputy
Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro, whose was sworn in as Deputy
Secretary-General on 5 February, making her the highest-ranking
woman at the Organization. “Violence against women is an issue
that cannot wait.”
Established by the General Assembly, the Trust Fund is administered
by UN Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) and has brought together
16 UN agencies, eight international and regional organizations and
many women’s groups. To date it has distributed nearly $13
million to 226 innovative programmes to address violence against
women in more than 100 countries.
Other speakers at today’s ceremony at UN Headquarters in New
York included UNIFEM Goodwill Ambassador and actress Nicole Kidman,
who called on all people to take work towards ending violence against
women. “We all know in our heads and our hearts that every
woman is entitled to a life free of violence,” she said. “Let’s
make that a reality.”
UNIFEM Executive Director Noeleen Heyzer said that the Trust Fund
serves as a catalyst for positive change. “Only when measures
to address violence against women are an integral part of national
strategies for development and human security will violence against
women become a rare occurrence instead of a global pandemic,”
she said.
The agency disburses grants ranging from $25,000 to $125,000 from
the Trust Fund to sponsor projects raising awareness of women’s
human rights, and include public education campaigns; coalition-building
in communities; and training of teachers, healthcare providers and
police to respond to and prevent violence.
Some Trust Fund-sponsored projects are the first of their kind.
For example, in Ecuador, an innovative programme receiving UNIFEM
funding is addressing the problem of violence perpetrated against
women in indigenous communities in the Amazon forest.
Ms. Migiro previously worked with UNIFEM on issues of women’s
empowerment when she was a Government minister in her home country
of Tanzania. She also briefly served on the Committee on the Elimination
of all Forms of Discrimination against Women, a panel of international
experts on women’s issues which tracks the status of women
in States which have ratified the landmark 1979 treaty on the issue.
“Now, as Deputy Secretary-General, I pledge to do all I can
to keep this world body united for the advancement of women everywhere,
and at the forefront of the cause of ending violence against women,”
she declared today.
A report issued last year by the Secretary-General called for greater
resources for the Trust Fund, and recommended that “States,
donors and international organizations increase significantly the
financial support for work on violence against women.”
From: http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=21603&Cr=violence&Cr1=women
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