UN Police workshop in Italy is latest
effort to attract more female officers into the force
17 March 2007 – (UN News Centre) Continuing
its efforts to attract more female officers into United Nations
policing, the division is organizing a 4-day conference at the
UN Training Centre in Italy next week, because despite increases
in the number of women in operations worldwide, there are still
too few, warns the world body's top police officer.
Progress has been made over the last two years
in attracting more female officers into the UN Police, including
the recent introduction into Liberia of an all-female specialized
unit, but while the Peacekeeping Department's (DPKO) Police Adviser
Mark Kroeker is full of praise for all his officers worldwide
– both men and women, he says the current figure of just
6 per cent of the force made up of female officers is unacceptable.
“I am extremely gratified by the increase
in the numbers of women who serve in police components in UN missions.
The fact that we have women in police and that they are serving
in various leadership positions, and various tactical positions,
an entire Formed Police Unit (FPU) for example made up of women
in Liberia, this is all encouraging,” he told the UN News
Centre.
“But this is way too few. Our attempts
at getting our Members States to contribute police are difficult
but the attempts in addition to add women to their contribution,
this is almost impossible: we need to have women police officers
so that we send the signal that women are co-equals in police
work and that's the way it should be because they're available
for every assignment as every man is in policing.”
The 20-23 March workshop in Brindisi, Italy,
will bring together around 30 gender experts from both within
and outside the UN to further discuss ways to encourage Member
States to provide more female officers, as well as come up with
operational guidelines for officers in the field.
It will also build on recommendations made at
earlier UN Police meetings, including a two-day seminar in Nigeria
in January, which called among other things for the Police Adviser
to visit prospective donor countries to discuss with them the
need to provide a mix of male and female officers.
“We are grateful to the countries that
have provided officers to UN policing, but we have a lot of work
to do to get more women into the field, we can do a lot better,”
says Mr. Kroeker, who will give the keynote address at the Brindisi
meeting, as well as offer other institutional support.
“The first and foremost reason that women
should be in policing is that police organizations, if they're
not an occupying force but a service organization, should reflect
the communities that they serve, and the communities that they
serve have a gender mix. And if you show that you have a mixed
composition there's a very significant chance that you will increase
the receptivity, the respect that that community will have for
the police.”
He also noted that there are certain specific
responsibilities that women in most cases perform better than
male officers, namely sexual assault cases and in some instances
child abuse cases where the victims – mostly female, feel
more at ease, culturally and emotionally, dealing with a female
officer.
From:http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=21905&Cr=police&Cr1=