International Campaign on
Women Human Rights Defenders opens global consultation meeting in
Sri Lanka
November 30, 2005 - (Amnesty International Canada) Nearly 200 activists
from approximately 70 countries worldwide gathered yesterday in
Colombo, Sri Lanka, to begin an historic global gathering of women
human rights defenders. The consultation meeting, attended by the
First Lady of Sri Lanka, Shiranthi Rajapakse, is addressing experiences
of women who defend a range of human rights issues, as well as women
and men around the globe who defend the human rights of women.
The consultation is focusing on the challenges faced by women human
rights defenders in their political organizing, including violence,
harassment, and intimidation. Conference participants will promote
a more nuanced understanding of the experience of women human rights
defenders, and will devise practical strategies to address challenges
such as a global rise in fundamentalisms and militarism, and a climate
increasingly hostile to the work of political activists in various
social movements. The gathering is linked to an international campaign
entitled “Defending Women Defending Rights: the International
Campaign on Women Human Rights Defenders" (ICWHRD).
Launched in April 2004, ICWHRD is an international initiative for
the recognition and protection of women activists who advocate the
realization of human rights for all people. Formed as a coalition
of women’s rights and human rights organizations, the Campaign
is rooted in overwhelming evidence that many women who are active
in different aspects of human rights work routinely face harassment,
abuse, violence, discrimination and marginalization. Human rights
groups and UN experts have begun to document the fact that defenders
are antagonized by governments, media, and police and within communities
and families. Defenders are attacked because of their advocacy and
because of their actual or assumed identitities.
In a keynote speech, Hina Jilani, the UN Special Representative
to the Secretary General on Human Rights Defenders, spoke of an
urgent need to identify and consider the special issues faced by
women working in the human rights field in order to ensure that
their important part in the struggle for universal human rights
is fully recognized and valued. She noted that women human rights
defenders are particularly vulnerable to attack because they often
defy cultural norms of gender, heterosexuality and femininity in
their identities and in the course of their advocacy. She pointed
out that in addition to formal state structures, groups including
religious movements, local communities and families are often responsible
for these violations, and that it is vital for human rights strategies
to take these actors into account.
Presenters addressed primary themes of the consultation, which include
sexuality-based attacks, the persecution perpetrated by fundamentalist
groups, and the significant role of family, community and state
in creation of widespread marginalization of and discrimination
and violence toward defenders.
Ruth del Valle, from Movimiento Nacional por los Derechos Humanos
in Guatemala, described a culture of governments paying lip service
to the principles of human rights in many parts of Latin America,
describing this as a “dialogue of the deaf.” “Nobody
actually hears what is being said. We complain and they listen,
but there is no effective attempt to address the abuse. They use
the fact that they listen as a smokescreen to claim they are interested
in human rights.” She also talked about the attitude of many
families to the mobilization and work of women human rights defenders,
noting “There are many cases where men are supportive of the
idea of human rights and women’s rights in theory –
yet they want their own women to stay at home for them and not to
get involved personally.”
Ndeye Nafissatou Faye, from Reseau SIGGIL JIGEEN in Senegal, spoke
to the conference participants about challenges to the women’s
movement in Africa, and attributed these to three linked social
factors: “First there is sacrifice. Women who work as human
rights defenders or in unions are often called to late meetings.
Our kids and families suffer – and our men sometime threaten
to divorce us. Then there is fear. Fear of social rejection, of
the way people look at us and of aggression. Fear of what will happen
to us if we become victims of violence in countries where there
is little provision for women in that situation. And fear of the
generally negative interpretation of feminism in Africa. And finally,
there is culpability. We often find ourselves asking if it is really
worth it. There’s a strong internal dilemma in Africa that
is contributing to the decline in participation in our women’s
movement. We need to change that.”
The conference continues through Thursday, and will culminate in
a final session on Friday in which the International Campaign for
Women Human Rights Defenders will host a public event and address
its plans for the future, and will call for the protection of women
human rights defenders around the world.
For further information, please contact:
John Tackaberry, Media Relations (Ottawa)
(613)744-7667 #236
Elizabeth Berton-Hunter, Media Relations (Toronto)
(416)363-9933 x32
From: http://www.amnesty.ca/resource_centre/news/view.php?load=arcview&article=3067&c=Resource+Centre+News
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