Statement of the United States of America at the January 10 Debate on Conflict Prevention

Statement of the United States of America at the January 10 Debate on Conflict Prevention

Extracts to this Statement: 

Participation

Extract: 

As Permanent Representative for the past three and a half years, I know that the Council’s richest, most meaningful exchanges have come when we have heard from real people — when Nadia Murad Basee Taha, a Yazidi woman trafficked by the Islamic State in Iraq and the Levant (ISIL), implored the Council to take action because ISIL, in her words, was using rape “to ensure that women could never again lead a normal life” (S/PV.7585, p.6); or when Dr. Zaher Sahloul returned from eastern Aleppo to relay the pleas of the city’s doctors that wounded children be allowed to be evacuated; or when Jackson Niamah, a Liberian health- care worker, briefed the Council (see S/PV.7268), at the height of the Ebola crisis, on the anguish of turning away infected patients and their children for a lack of supplies and beds. When we on the Council show leadership and put people at the centre of our decisions, the effect is powerful. It can change minds.

PeaceWomen Consolidated Themes: 
Participation

SGBV

Extract: 

The Government accepted the force. Five months later, not a single RPF soldier has been deployed, even as Government forces have continued killing civilians, used sexual violence as a systematic weapon of war, and positioned themselves to carry out large-scale mass atrocities.

PeaceWomen Consolidated Themes: 
Sexual and Gender-Based Violence