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RESOLUTION 1325
Full text
History & Analysis
Who's Responsible for Implementation?
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Background on Bougainville Women for Peace
and Freedom
Joan Macdonald, Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
-Aotearoa, January 2001
The Bougainville Women for Peace and Freedom (BWPF) have developed
a human rights programme in the formerly blockaded areas of Bougainville.
This programme is in response to community grief, trauma and the
perceived need of acknowledging people's suffering in the hope of
redressing this continuing lack in their communities.
Human Rights workshops were held in Central, North and South Bougainville
in 1998 Although the meetings were held for women large crowds of
men and chiefs joined in. They were all anxious to know what the
UN Charter identifies as basic human rights, and their response
to identified abuses was overwhelming.
While the war was on 2 volumes of these abuses were compiled by
Marilyn Havini and these have been recognised by both the Bougainville
Interim Government (BIG) and the BWPF as their own documents even
though they contained information of abuses committed and suffered
by all sides in the conflict. Many risked their lives to send their
information over the war years to the Sydney office.
The University of NSW School of Information, Library and Archives
Studies created a database specifically for the Bougainville HRA
Compilation. At the end of the war the Bougainville Reconciliation
Government wanted this database to be set up in Bougainville. The
BWPF selected one of their members to be trained in human rights
and NGO representative work for women.
Members of the BIG and Bougainville Transitional Government (BTG)
in Bougainville had discussed looking into the establishment of
a Human Rights Commission. After having experienced all manner of
human rights violations and abuses during the nine year conflict
it seemed urgent that every man, woman and child on Bougainville
must be availed of a process where they could bring up their human
rights grievances.They have learned a hard lesson from countries
such as Indonesia and Papua New Guinea (PNG) where it has taken
years to implement UN directives to establish these Commissions.
Four women from North Bougainville attended the Diplomacy Training
Programme at UNSW in 1996, and this was organised through the Inter-Church
Women's Forum based in Buka. To achieve this with the assistance
of the Uniting Church of Australia they had to be very careful not
to incur the wrath of PNG by going into areas of Bougainville under
PNG military occupation, so Central and South Bougainville, where
the crisis hit hardest, continued to miss out. It was also in those
unreached areas that most of the hideous human rights abuses and
atrocities were committed, and where the people suffered most in
the nine year war conflict and crisis.
Since the signing of the Burnham Declaration in 1997, followed by
the Burnham Truce in October of that year, the deployment of the
Truce Monitoring Group, the Leaders Political Meeting in Lincoln(
NZ) and the final signing of a permanent ceasefire in April 1998,
a peace process has been in place in Bougainville.
There is now a Regional UN sponsored Peace Monitoring group in Bougainville.
The UN has established an office in Arawa to independently monitor
the peace process.
This secured peace process has provided opportunities for the women
of Bougainville to be fully involved in peace building, reconstruction
and development of the war weary island. The women are not involved
by 'default' but because of their own traditional roles within the
culture and tradition of Bougainville. This is because Bougainville
is a matrilineal society were the women are natural leaders in their
own right within their respective clans and tribes. Their roles
are very much respected within Bougainville society.
The women of Bougainville have become a major part of the current
peace process in their own right as matriarchs of the Bougainville
culture. The Bougainville leaders, by acknowledging this, are committed
to peace by peaceful means and it has been a new initiative for
the men to include in all peace negotiations. The people value the
women's contribution and see the need for specific training.
This information is from a report and request for funding prepared
by Marilyn Taleo Havini the overseas coordinator for BWPF.
This request was made to aid agencies in 1998-9 to provide funds
for the woman who had been selected to do the Diplomacy training
programme in Manila and the training in database computing in Sydney.
The request also included funding for office equipment in Bougainville
to carry out the work. Several people from Corso Aotearoa who attended
a conference in NSW where the request was made took it back to their
organization which agreed to provide a major part of this funding
with the aid of a government subsidy. The office equipment was delivered
courtesy of the RNZAF as it is very difficult to get aid into Bougainville,
particularly the occupied part, from New Zealand, as it has to go
through Australia and PNG.
At the end of 2000 Bougainville leaders called on the New Zealand
and Australian governments to help break the deadlock which has
arisen in the peace process and get the process back on track. The
last round of peace talks had broken down because PNG opposes the
independence option. In a press release in mid December Bougainville
leaders Governor John Momis and President Joseph Kabui warned that
a renewed war of secession could erupt on Bougainville island unless
the PNG government addresses the issues of a referendum on independence.
Since then there have been more discussions in Kokopo, PNG, and
an agreement was reached on 26th January 2001 for "Agreed Principles
on a Referendum". This a compromise agreement to hold a referendum,
in which independence and greater autonomy would be the options.
This referendum to be held within 10 to 15 years form the date of
the election of a Bougainville government. The agreed principles
are however conditional on weapons disposal by the BRA and "good
governance." Sam Kauona Sirivi a former commander of the BRA
at present studying in New Zealand has given a cautious welcome
to the Agreement but has also commented that "it's an unfair
agreement and a vote on independence in a referendum should not
be made conditional on BRA weapons disposal only." He pointed
out that the Lincoln Agreement, provision 4, of which he was a signatory,
clearly emphasised the withdrawal of the Defence Force from Bougainville
in a phased withdrawal subject to the restoration of civil authority
and this should have been included in the new agreement.
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