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Women in war need greater safeguards
March 7, 2008 – (Reuters) VIOLENCE suffered
by ordinary women civilians as a result of war is causing lasting
and far-reaching damage to whole communities said the Irish Red
Cross today on International Women's Day.
Rapes and other sexual crimes perpetrated against
women in specific countries are a weapon of terror that prevent
women - who are often left at home to mind children and tend to
livestock - from being able to move freely within their own areas
and thus get food, water and other necessities which their families
depend upon.
Yet, this is just one example of the many ways
that women bear the brunt of warfare - and are often the unaccounted
for or \x93hidden\x94 victims of conflict. Interviews conducted
by the International Committee of the Red Cross with widows of the
Iraqi wars and the Bosnian war, show the impact of the loss of missing
husbands on the lives of their wives long after these wars have
ended.
"Not knowing what happened to husbands, father,
(and) a brother is a harsh reality for women in war. On one hand
in their society they are not wives, not widows, they are something
in between. On the other they became the breadwinner of their families.
The International Committee of the Red Cross, on behalf of the families,
promote the right to know and the states have obligations to take
necessary measures to clarify the fate of the missing and inform
their families and help them in their daily enquiries" said,
ICRC Tracing officer for Iraq Jamila Hammami. (for full interview
see www.redcross.ie)
Here in Ireland, the Irish Red Cross supports this
work by helping to trace missing family members left behind by people
seeking refuge here because of war or other disasters in their home
countries.
The Irish Red Cross also supports the development of much stronger
protections for women by governments, agencies and other bodies
with power to change women's lives.
This year, working with the Irish umbrella body
to combat violence based on gender - the Gender Based Violence consortium
- the Irish Red Cross will support the Irish government's work to
ensure full implementation of UN resolution 1325 with the drafting
of a national plan. This resolution, passed unanimously eight years
ago (October 2000) specifically addresses the impact of war on women,
and women's contributions to conflict resolution and sustainable
peace.
Through its work in Ireland with the Gender Based
Violence consortium, set-up in 2005, the Irish Red Cross has already
supported a number of projects designed to bring an end to sexually-based
violence. These include the production of publications to highlight
the issue in certain countries; guidelines to aid agencies to deal
with the problem; and training on how to deal with the problem to
members of the Irish Defence Forces and other organisations whose
personnel are sent overseas.
This work is consistent with the work being done
in many countries where Red Cross and Red Crescent organisations
operate to support action to end violence that is often although
not exclusively directed against women for reasons of gender.
From:http://www.alertnet.org/thenews/fromthefield/irishredcr/1961d107ccd7ebc1a3511028bdb3e121.htm
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