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RESOLUTION 1325
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Women Want More Leadership
Roles in UN Peacekeeping Missions
31 October 2006 (Voicce of America) Today (October 31st) is the
sixth anniversary of UN Security Council Resolution 1325 on Women
Peace and Security. Adopted in 2000, the resolution deals with
the role of women in peacekeeping and peace building. One of the
largest UN peacekeeping operations to date is in Africa. Uganda-born
Rachel Mayanja is the special advisor to UN Secretary General
Kofi Annan on gender issues and advancement of women. She tells
VOA English to Africa reporter James Butty that women are underrepresented
at all levels of UN peace support operations.
“Overall in peacekeeping, we have about 23 percent women
in all the civilian components. And that covers all the peacekeeping
in Africa, and the numbers are very small,” she said.
Mayanja says women can play a key role in supporting UN peacekeeping
missions.
“My first involvement with peacekeeping operations was in
Namibia during the transition, when the UN sent a team. That team
had a lot of women. Many of us played usually female roles, but
we had women as district directors. So I think women can play
a key role in supporting the peacekeeping mission, especially
in breaking into areas which are not easily broken into by the
traditional military observers,” she said.
Mayanja disagrees with the notion that because men start most
wars in Africa, they instead of women should be allowed to end
those wars.
“Well, I wish they would not start it in the first place.
But we have also seen that while they go off fighting, women replaced
them. The women run the communities. The women support the families.
And yet when they come back, they want the women to move over…So
I think women should be given the opportunity to lead the community
the way they have done during the conflict period and to lead
society into peace.”
Mayanja also disagrees with those who say women have no business
in the dangerous business of peacekeeping. She says women are
already exposed to dangers.“Today’s conflict has turned
women’s bodies into battleground. You know gender violence,
sexual rape, and all these other violence against women are common
occurrences in all the conflicts,” she said.
Mayanja says having a woman as head of a UN peacekeeping mission
would make a big difference.
“We’ve seen this making a big difference in Burundi
where we had a woman Special Representative. Why? Because they
take particular interest in the issue, and they are not part of
the boys network. They will not tolerate this kind of conduct,”
Mayanja said.
From: http://www.voanews.com/english/Africa/2006-10-31-voa11.cfm
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