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RESOLUTION 1325
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WOMEN ACTIVISTS CALL FOR PEACE
June 10, 2003 (IRIN) Sixty women peace activists
in the Somali capital, Mogadishu, have appealed for the restoration
of peace and stability in the city.
Their call was made during a women's forum held in Mogadishu, organised
by the Centre for Research and Dialogue (CRD), an affiliate of the
War-Torn Societies Project International, according to Maryam Mahmud
Haji, a CRD gender officer.
Maryam told IRIN on Tuesday that women could make a difference,
and that the leaders would have to listen to them. Women's "support
is very crucial to any leader who has future political aspirations,"
she said.
The women, from a cross-section of the Banadir Region (Mogadishu
and environs), were peace activists who had been trying to persuade
the various Mogadishu factions to agree on a common administration
for the region, Sharifo Adow, a member of the group, told IRIN.
She said the forum provided women with an opportunity to share their
ideas and "put together a plan of action".
"We have decided that we will do anything to bring pressure
to bear on the leaders to accept a unified administration for Banadir
Region and to restore peace and stability," Sharifo said. "This
city has suffered more than anywhere else in Somalia, and it is
the women who bear the brunt of the problems. We are the mothers,
sisters and the wives who have to care for the family after our
men are killed or maimed."
Sharifo said her group had met all the faction leaders and members
of the Transitional National Government to "urge them to resolve
their differences for the benefit of the people".
"We are more hopeful than before, but we are not there yet,"
she said. "We are calling on them to set up this administration
before the Mbagathi [peace] talks [being held in the Kenyan capital,
Nairobi] end."
Sharifo said her group would not hesitate to denounce "those
leaders, who prove to be an obstacle, to the people of Mogadishu
and to the international community".
Sharifo said it was the first time such a diverse group from the
different clans in Mogadishu had met. Its members were women who
had formerly supported different factions, but were now determined
to put the past aside.
"We have decided to put our differences aside and work for
the common good," she told IRIN.
From: http://allafrica.com/stories/200306100100.html
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