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NATO Provincial Reconstruction
Teams Need a Gender Policy, Say Afghan Advocates
September 6, 2007 - (Advocacy
Net News) Advocates for women's rights in Afghanistan are urging
NATO to develop a gender policy for NATO's 25 provincial reconstruction
teams (PRTs), in an effort to better address the needs of women
and bridge the gap between military and civilian reconstruction
efforts.
The case is being made by the Afghan
Women's Network (AWN), which comprises 57 Afghan women's organizations.
It was presented last week at a PRT meeting in Kabul by Afifa Azim,
the AWN Director and Audrey Roberts, a Peace Fellow of The Advocacy
Project (AP) who volunteered with AWN this summer.
PRTs include military and civilian
personnel and have a mandate for security and reconstruction, but
this mixed role has caused controversy since PRTs were first deployed
in January 2003.
Many civil society organizations
are reluctant to work with PRTs out of concern that they will be
associated with NATO's military effort and exposed to reprisals.
The concern has increased after a summer of suicide attacks, hostage-taking
and attacks on aid workers.
AWN argues that this split between
security and relief has weakened the international reconstruction
effort, and points out that PRTs are already key players in the
rebuilding of Afghanistan.
As of May, PRTs were administering
more than 7,500 development projects at a cost of about $630 million,
often in isolated areas where NGOs cannot work.
According to AWN, the impact of
this work would be greatly enhanced by a policy on gender, and it
recommends that NATO's International Security Assistance Force (ISAF)
recruits a gender advisor and hire gender "focal points"
for all teams.
PRTs should promote the presence
of women at regional and district meetings, and consult more with
NGOs and Afghan women's civil society, says AWN. PRTs should also
identify "safe space" where women can meet them without
compromising their security or affronting cultural sensitivities.
The success of PRT projects should be measured by whether women
are participating in "governance structures."
PRTs have reacted with caution to
the proposal, and AWN accepts that it might appear to dilute their
military mission and threaten their autonomy.
PRTs are led by individual governments,
and can have widely differing priorities and budgets. But, says
AWN, a coordinated policy on gender would bring more uniformity
and focus into their development work. Furthermore, says AWN, investing
in women builds security, and projects that fail to engage women
are unlikely to succeed.
In one case, women did not use a
PRT-funded road because it led to a government center rather than
clinics or schools. In Paktika province, 75 women were invited to
a meeting on reconstruction, but none attended because the location
- the governor's office - was considered unsafe.
A strong PRT policy on gender would also be consistent with efforts
to harmonize the multilateral aid effort.
PRTs were brought under ISAF last October and ISAF itself is subject
to the authority of the UN Security Council, which has called for
gender to be mainstreamed into peace-building.
This August, humanitarian agencies and security forces in Afghanistan
drafted new guidelines on Civil-Military Cooperation (CIMIC), which
call for the involvement of "greater numbers of women in all
levels of decision-making and in field-based operations." Gender
was included at the insistence of AWN and other NGOs.
Once a new PRT gender policy is
developed, AWN recommends that it be boiled down into key guidelines
and printed on pocket checklists that can be distributed to all
PRT personnel. In a welcome sign that AWN’s advocacy is finally
getting results, AWN learned today that gender checklists will be
developed.
AWN has recruited a new advocacy
consultant, and plans to continue lobbying NATO in Afghanistan and
with member governments. If and when the PRT heads agree on a policy,
it would pass to a steering committee of ambassadors for approval.
From:http://www.advocacynet.org/resource/980
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