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RESOLUTION 1325
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SOUTH AFRICA: Women with guns
to their heads
March 8, 2005 (IRIN) - In South Africa
a woman is shot dead by a current or former partner every 18 hours,
according to a new report from the Stop Violence Against Women
campaign and the Control Arms campaign.
The report, 'The Impact of Guns on Women's Lives', compiled by
Amnesty International, the development agency Oxfam, and the global
International Action Network on Small Arms, said women were paying
an increasingly heavy price for the unregulated multibillion-dollar
trade in small arms.
South Africa is named in the report, along with countries in the
American continent and Europe, all battling to stem a mounting
tide of handguns.
There are an estimated 650 million small arms in the world today,
nearly 60 percent of which are in the hands of private individuals,
most of them men, said the report.
A large number of women suffered directly or indirectly from armed
violence. "Women are particularly at risk of certain crimes
because of their gender; crimes such as family violence and rape.
Given that women are almost never the buyers, owners or users
of small arms, they also suffer completely disproportionately
from armed violence," said Denise Searle, Amnesty
International's Senior Director of Communications and Campaigning
at the launch of the report this week.
"It is often claimed that guns are needed to protect women
and their families, but the reality is totally opposite - women
want guns out of their lives", she noted.
Guns affect women's lives, even "when they are not directly
in the firing line," as they assume the role of breadwinners
and primary carers when male relatives are killed, injured or
disabled by gun violence.
The prevalence of affordable small arms that are and easy to carry
and use has changed the landscape of warfare, allowing women and
children to be recruited as combatants in countries as far apart
as Nepal and Liberia.
Laws protecting women from physical abuse have not helped, including
in South Africa, where violence against women has been regarded
as a "private" matter between the abuser, the victim
and the immediate family, the report said. A 1999 study in South
Africa discovered that more than a third of women believed that
if a wife did something wrong, her husband had the right to punish
her.
The provision in the Domestic Violence Act in South Africa, giving
police the power to remove a weapon from an alleged abuser at
the victim's request, was rarely implemented, as most law enforcers
did not view violence against women seriously, according to a
study cited by the report.
The report suggested making a national gun licence mandatory for
anyone wanting to own a gun, with the exclusion of those with
a history of family violence; making violence against women a
criminal offence, with effective penalties for perpetrators; and
specific training for law enforcement organisations to ensure
that they respected women's rights.
The campaigners also called for the equal participation of women
in demobilisation, reintegration and disarmament programmes to
ensure the effective collection and destruction of surplus and
illegal weapons; and the establishment of an Arms Trade Treaty
prohibiting arms exports to countries where there was a likelihood
of the weapons being used for violence against women and other
human rights violations.
From: http://www.irinnews.org/print.asp?ReportID=45997
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