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NGO
Working Group on Women, Peace and Security
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INTERNATIONAL CONSULTATIVE MEETING ON UNITED NATIONS RESOLUTION 1325
KAMPALA, UGANDA
MARCH 25 26, 2002
SUMMARY REPORT
The regional consultation on UN Resolution 1325 was held in Kampala Uganda on
Monday 25th and Tuesday 26th March 2002. The meeting was organised by the Africa
office of Urgent Action Fund in collaboration with the Womens International
League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF) and was hosted by Kituo Cha Katiba, the
Ugandan based East African Centre for Constitutional Development. The meeting
was facilitated by WILPF and International Alert. The Ford Foundation provided
financial support for the meeting.
The objectives of the consultations were:
1. To take stock of the implementation of Resolution 1325 in the Africa Region
2. To take stock of how the Resolution has been utilized (if at all) in Africa
in facilitating national, regional and International instruments in the region
3. To raise awareness on the importance of Resolution 1325 in addressing issues
of post conflict reconstruction including peace building, peace making and peace
education.
4. To examine the role of the media in implementing and monitoring implementation
of the Resolution.
5. To make recommendations to civil society, the United Nations Agencies and
Governments on possibilities of enhanced utilization of the resolution in assuring
and ensuring the benefits to women that this resolution promises. In other words,
to make it a living instrument.
Twenty-one participants attended the meeting. They included peace, refugee and
human rights activists from Zanzibar, Kenya, Uganda, South Africa, Nigeria,
Sierra Leonne, Somalia, Sudan, New South Sudan, and the Democratic Republic
of the Congo. Also represented were NGO leaders, the media and representatives
of legal and health institutions from the region. Three international organisations
working within Africa were also represented. The participants were chosen carefully
to reflect the wide range of experiences and interventions by Civil Society
Organisations in the arena of conflict in Africa. Among them was a member of
the transitional Parliamentary Assembly of Somalia, and a Congolese Womens
human rights activist and winner of the Martin Ennals Human Rights Prize in
2000.
Isha Dyfan of WILPF and Ancil Adrian Paul of International Alert undertook the
Facilitation.
Nyaradzai Gumbonzvanda, UNIFEMs Regional Programme Director [East and
Horn of Africa) set the tone for the meeting in a powerful key note speech emphasizing
that African women should be proud of themselves as they had already been working
on the issues addressed by Resolution 1325 before it was adopted. The resolution
thus validated womens concerns and should be utilised primarily as a political
tool and also as a tool for:ÿ Negotiation
- Accountability
- Leverage
The speaker suggested that a way of strengthening womens participation
in politics, peace building and in post-conflict reconstruction might be to
build and nurture alliances and support networks. These stronger networks would
be better placed to garner human and financial resources for effective participation.
The speaker identified some of the challenges that faced women in realising
the promise of Resolution 1325. These challenges included being at the margins
of access to critical and `confidential` information, lack of capacity, minimum
representation in facilitating peace processes by being absent in key committees,
and in party political structures. She highlighted the continuing challenge
of patriarchal systems and absence of effective networks. She spoke to the private
and public responsibilities that women undertake and how the private responsibilities
affect womens abilities to participate in the public sphere. The issue
of peace at the household level was crucial if women are to participate fully
in these processes. Finally the keynote speaker suggested that participants
should interrogate the resolution as part of a wider discussion on promoting
a culture of human rights and democratic governance. After two days of discussions,
the meeting was brought to a close by the Ugandan Minister for Disaster Preparedness
and Refugees, the Honourable Christine Aporu. She told participants that her
Government was aware of its obligations under the UN Resolution and that her
ministry stands ready to promote the implementation of 1325 and to work on strengthening
it as well.Following lively discussions and working group sessions, participants
identified the following focus issues affecting womens peace and security
in their different country contexts: -
- Discriminatory laws: these deny women their human rights and lack mechanisms
to address gender imbalances. These laws deny women mobility both physically
and professionally.
- A culture of exclusion and marginalisation in the management of socio-economic
political affairs and the resource base. The continuation of the colonial legacy
of divide and rule prevails and needs to be addressed.
- Simmering and prevalent ethnic conflicts across the board precipitated by
ethnic, religious, generational, geographical factors among others and resulting
insecurity. This affects the everyday environment and results in vulnerability,
forced migration and displacement of people, the proliferation of refugees,
slavery and extreme poverty.
-Absence of women from strategic roles and positions in security and peace organs
such as the Military and Police Forces as well as from critical committees in
peace processes. There is a clear resistance to gender equity and inadequate
capacity building and a lack of genuine political will to remedy these ills.
€ Institutionalisation of patriarchy and the male mould in the definition of
peace and security results in exclusion of womens perspectives and the
exclusion of various components of society.
- State Collapse resulting in anarchy and the lack of protection for vulnerable
groups including women, the aged, the physically and mentally challenged, refugees
and Internally Displaced Persons
- Traditional Customs and practices promoted by a culture of patriarchy that
has distorted customs and religious practices against womens interests
and participation, resulting in domestic violence and the use of womens
bodies as battlegrounds in wartime and in times of internal conflict. This violence
includes female genital mutilation, sexual slavery and forced prostitution.
All these practices result in a collusion of silence, ignorance, and illiteracy,
denial of access to resources and lack of ownership of processes even those
that women had traditionally been integral to.
- HIV/AIDS and its consequences particularly on women.
- Violence against women including rape and systematic rape, sexual abuse, defilement
and battering.
- Forced prostitution, trafficking and abductions by rebel forces, peace keepers
and security personnel
Gaps identified in the Resolution
o No differentiation between the protection of women in recognised states and
those living in unrecognised territories e.g. New/South Sudan. This needs to
be addressed for true accountability.
o No mechanism apparent in the resolution for the civil society groups to monitor
the implementation of the tool and no bench marks apparent for impact assessment.
o Lack of early warning and early response mechanisms
o No mention of peace education, both formal and informal
o No mention of Internally Displaced Persons (IDPS) or any mechanism to
protect them.
o Danger of encouraging impunity by amnesty provisions.
Local Recommendations
oEngender and mainstream peace education and conflict resolution skills at all
levels(schools, etc)
oTranslate the resolution into local languages
oSystematise outreach and strengthen media involvement in disseminating the
resolution
oWomen must use the power of their traditional role in nurturing to actively
work against armed conflict.
National
oCreate safe zones in refugee and IDP camps
oNational governments must comply with resolution 1325 and should be held accountable.
oPresidents of national governments must ensure that women are part of their
governments at cabinet level in order to advise them on gender issues. These
Ministers and others in high level national positions must be trained in gender
sensitivity.
o Local women and their organisations must make themselves available to consult
and brief the Security Council and other missions to their areas. It was noted
that currently a Security Council Mission was underway in the Democratic Republic
of the Congo.
International Recommendations
The international community must ensure that the Resolution can apply equally
to both recognised states and non-recognised entities. There should be;
o Adequate and sustainable funding for capacity building and technical training
of women peace and human rights civil society organisations.
o A fund co-coordinating body or bodies should be established for training of
civil society organisations and UNIFEM should be involved.
o Structures of international agencies that are currently unfavourable to women
should be revised to prevent exclusion of local women, prevent limits on the
freedom of movement of women and their access to reproductive health care, the
separation of families and rationing of food.
o There should be the creation of a strategic and separate agency for the protection
of IDPs which will ensure that there are enforcement mechanisms within refugee
and IDP camps
o Member states must develop gender sensitive policies for the protection of
IDPs and these should be monitored objectively.
o African women must be represented in adequate numbers at all levels in the
monitoring of the Resolution.
o Report and recommendations resulting from the Kampala consultation to be sent
to the independent experts preparing the UNIFEM operational report on women,
peace and security and to the office of the Special Adviser on Gender to the
UN Secretary-General.
o Feedback on the process and progress of the implementation of the resolution
to be sent to the Africa 1325 network created at the consultation.
o Security Council missions to conflict zones should be briefed by both local
and international NGOs.
o The United Nations must treat low intensity conflicts with the
same seriousness as they treat high intensity conflict in order
to save lives.
o UNHCR should revise and strengthen their guidelines for protection of refugee
women and girls and ensure that they are informed of the existence of these
guidelines.
Action to be
taken by the participants to further promote the Resolution
Local
o Sensitise the populations and especially women living in non-recognised entities
to the existence and relevance of 1325 as a rights based advocacy tool.
o Build the capacity of local women and their organisations to promote peace
and for monitoring Resolution 1325
o Engage in advocacy and mobilisation
o Launch awareness campaigns on the resolution.National
o Publicise the resolution among national populations using all forms of media
i.e. newsletters, publications, drama, music, television, radio, the internet
and e-groups.
o Will engage in strategic planning to ensure that training and material on
the Resolution is harmonised nationally as well as regionally
o Inform local leaders, including religious groups, diplomats, parliamentarians,
politicians and other policy makers of the resolution and the issues it addresses
o Engage in advocacy and mobilisation
Formation of a network
o During the meeting the participants created the Africa 1325 Network to engage
in sharing of information and experiences
o monitoring of implementation and
o to act as a pressure group nationally, regionally and internationally.
The group will comprise the 21 members but will be enlarged after a period of
one year and further discussion. ISIS-WICCE, the Ugandan regional documentation
and resource centre was designated the focal point for one year. ISIS will host
and supervise an intern to conduct the business of the network. WILPF, Urgent
Action Fund-Africa and ISIS volunteered to fundraise for the initiative. Kampala
March 28th 2002
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