| Gender and International
Justice:
Reparations for Crimes against Women in Conflict and Post-conflict
Contexts
Peace Research Center, Bulletin InfoCIP 7, November 2005
New conflicts presume consequences especially harmful for women
and children. About 90% of all victims of war belong to one of these
two collectives. In addition, women are subject to different manifestations
of sexual violence that have traditionally remained silenced, considered
to be offences that are domestic in nature, rather than being deemed
war crimes and violations of human rights. Unfortunately, impunity
with respect to these types of crimes has become the norm rather
than the exception.In current conflicts, the generalization of these
types of offences has been to define them as gender-based crimes.
To name these transgressions is to acknowledge them and to raise
them from the invisibility in which they were previously submerged.
In recent years, encouraging advances have been produced from the
fields of the United Nations, international justice, academic, and
civil society organizations that have put sexual violence in a new
perspective as a crime against humanity.
Despite the fact that the IV Geneva Convention
points to sexual violence as a war crime, it wasn’t until
the ad hoc courts of Rwanda and Ex Yugoslavia in the 90’s
that rape was considered an act of genocide. The International Criminal
Court has gone further to include rape as a crime against humanity
and an act of genocide when it is perpetrated systematically against
civil population.
Gaby Oré Aguilar, researcher and contributor to the Peace
Research Center (Centro de Investigación para la Paz, CIP-FUHEM)
and the director of the project “Gender Justice: Reparations
and Armed Conflicts” in her article Gender and Justice in
Transitional Societies: An Approximation from the Perspective of
Human Rights, deals with key questions on violence against women
in contexts of armed conflict and the possible responses from the
international justice. This article is a summary of the paper presented
by the author to the International Seminar “The Gender Perspective
in the International Relations Agenda and Peace Building”,
held on November 18th 2004 organized by the Instituto Complutense
de Estudios Internacionales (ICEI) – Area of Gender and Development,
Complutense University of Madrid. This document is next to be published
by the said institution.
Gender Justice, Reparations and Armed Conflicts
The new possibilities opened by international justice promoted a
debate from civil society about the need to strengthen national
and international judicial norms towards reparation relating to
gender crimes. To contribute to this debate, the Peace Research
Center (Centro de Investigaciónpara la Paz (CIP-FUHEM), along
with Women’s Link Worldwide has just organized a meeting of
international experts focused on legal reparations for gender crimes
in the context of armed conflicts, which took place in Madrid on
the 10th and 11th of October, 2005. This meeting was framed around
the project “Gender Justice, Reparations, and Armed Conflicts”,
which is carried out by these two organizations. The project focuses
its research on the internal judicial treatment of these crimes
and examines two case studies: Colombia and Sri Lanka. In the framework
of this meeting was a roundtable titled “Gender and Justice
in Armed Conflicts”, which raised key aspects and questions
pertaining to justice and reparation for female victims of sexual
violence in the framework of armed conflicts. The roundtable brought
together more than twentyinternational experts from Europe, Latin
America, and the United States.
More information on the project can be found at: www.genderjustice.org
Study cases: Colombia and Sri Lanka
In the armed conflict in Colombia, crimes against women are widespread.
Susana Villarán de la Puente, Speaker for Colombia and for
Women’s Rights of the Inter-American Commission for HumanRights
(CIDH) visited Colombia in June 2005 with the intention of getting
to know the situation of women’s rights there. José
Zepeda, director of the Latin American Department in Radio Nederland,
gathers some key aspects of this visit in his interview with the
Speaker.
For a profile of the armed conflict in Colombia and its impact on
women, please visit:
www.womenwarpeace.org/colombia/colombia.htm
The principles of Truth, Justice and Reparation are of application
to the gender crimes. An analysis on the right to reparation in
the context of the present demobilization process of the paramilitary
groups in Colombia is presented in the article by Gaby Oré
“The Right to Reparations in the Demobilization of Colombian
Paramilitaries”, published in the CIP Yearbook 2005, Cartographies
of Power. Hegemony and Responses, edited by the Peace Research Center
(Centro de Investigación para la Paz, CIP-FUHEM).
Sri Lanka is one of the very few cases in which, after the signing
of peace agreements, formally included women in the negotiation
table throughthe formation of a Gender Sub Committee. Kumudini Samuel
is founder of the organization Women and Media Collective, and was
a member of the Sub Committee on Gender Issues of the Peace Process
in Sri Lanka. Samuel revisits the obstacles and achievements for
this subcommittee in heri nterview with Nuria del Viso.For a profile
of the armed conflict in Sri Lanka and its impact on women, please
visit:
http://www.womenwarpeace.org/sri_lanka/sri_lanka.htm
More information on the work of the Sub Committee of Gender in the
Peace Process in Sri Lanka, please visit http://www.peaceinsrilanka.org/insidepages/SubCommittees/SubComonGender.asp
Resolutions and pending challenges
Resolution 1325 by the United Nations Security Council, now five
years old, recognized the inclusion of women in the operations relating
to peace and in decision making processes for the prevention and
resolution of conflicts. This Resolution was followed in the same
year by other passed by the European Parliament on women, peace
and security. On the fifth anniversary of these resolutions, the
challenge remains. To change these declarations into reality implies
resolute actions on the part of the international community together
with specific mechanisms to implement them, and staff policies with
a gender perspective in all making-decision levels. In addition,
it needs on the part of national governments in conflict or post-conflict
contexts specific measures to include women and the gender perspective
in peace building and to include violence against women in conflict
contexts as crimes in national law.
On the analyses of Resolution 1325, we recommend the articles by
Elisabeth Porter, “Women and Security: ‘You Cannot Dance
if You Cannot Stand”, and by Lesley Abdela, “1325: Deeds
not Words”, which underline the importance of including women
in the formal peace processes. These articles were published by
Open Democracy, and offered in Spanish by the Peace Research Center
(Centro de Investigación para la Paz, CIP-FUHEM).
“Women and Security: ‘You Cannot Dance if you Cannot
Stand”
http://www.opendemocracy.net/democracy-resolution_1325/dance_2937.jsp
“1325: Deeds not Words”
http://www.opendemocracy.net/democracy-resolution_1325/conflict_2929.jsp
From: http://www.cipresearch.fuhem.es/
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