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Women Demand UN Meeting
and a Say in Kosovo's Future
The Advocacy Project
April 25, 2007 – (Oneworld)
Vienna and Washington, DC: In a powerful show of coordinated advocacy,
17 leading members of women’s civil society from six Balkan
countries and Kosovo have asked for an urgent meeting with the UN
Security Council, and repeated their demand that women must participate
directly in talks on the future of Kosovo.
The 17 advocates are members of the Regional Women’s Lobby
for Peace, Security and Justice in Southeast Europe, a group that
formed last year to present a unified women’s position on
the security challenges facing the region. They come from Macedonia,
Albania, Bosnia, Croatia, Montenegro, Serbia and Kosovo.
A new communiqué from the Lobby, issued after a meeting in
Vienna last week, requests a meeting with a fact-finding mission
from the UN Security Council that is visiting Belgrade and Prishtina
this month.
The communiqué also registers concern that women are still
excluded from the negotiations over Kosovo’s future: “The
absence of women in the future status talks represents failures
by the United Nations to fulfill UN (Resolution) 1325, which should
be corrected in the future. Looking ahead, we urge the Security
Council to show resolve in ensuring women’s participation
and women’s contribution in the implementation of the proposal
on the future status of Kosovo.”
While the Lobby expresses support for the UN’s proposals for
Kosovo, formulated by UN Special Envoy Marti Ahtisaari, it also
calls for a new UN resolution on Kosovo that recognizes “human
security for all women and men” as the cornerstone of sustainable
peace in Kosovo and in the region.
In a separate communiqué, the Lobby also calls on the governments
of Serbia and the Bosnian Serb Republic (Republika Srpska) to fully
disclose all documents relating to their involvement in the 1995
massacre at Srebrenica, and comply with the February ruling of the
International Court of Justice, which found that genocide had occurred
in Bosnia during the war.
The communiqué states: “We call upon the government
of the Republic of Serbia and Republika Srpska to act responsibly
(and) to open public debates in their respective parliaments and
in society on accountability, reparations for the victims, and on
the importance of official acceptance of the truth.”
Failing to make the documents public would show that the Serbian
government is “protecting the criminal institutions of the
Milosevic regime,” says the communiqué.
The Lobby’s demands show the growing cohesiveness of women
advocates in the Balkans, and their determination to present a vision
for the troubled region that is based on human rights rather than
nationalism.
The Advocacy Project is sending a peace fellow, Devon Cone (Tufts
University) to work with the Kosova Women’s Network, a founding
member of the Regional Women’s Lobby, this summer.
From: http://us.oneworld.net/article/view/148563/1/
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