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RESOLUTION 1325
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U.N. Asks for More Women
Peacekeepers
Mar 16 2007, (IPS) - When the United Nations commemorated
International Women's Day last week, its Department of Peacekeeping
Operations (DPKO) aired a longstanding complaint: a woeful shortage
of women military personnel in U.N. missions overseas.
Of the 71,673 military personnel in peacekeeping operations, only
1,034 were women, and out of the 8,482 U.N. police personnel,
only 454 were women, according to the latest figures released
here.
The DPKO's "Year in Review" cites the
famous U.S. Marine Corps recruiting slogan: "We are looking
for a few good men." But gives it a gender perspective: "We
are looking for a few good women"-- or rather "a whole
lot of them." The DPKO says that only about one percent of
military personnel are women and only about four percent are in
police units.
"Member states were asked to double the number of female
uniformed peacekeepers every year for the next few years, while
for the long-term DPKO's military division has set the goal of
reaching 10 percent female representation (in U.N. peacekeeping
operations)."
On the civilian side, however, there has been a steady increase
in women recruits over the last 10 years, reaching 30 percent
of the staff. The duties assigned to civilian staff include political
and civil affairs, public information, human rights and electoral
issues.
With more female military observers, the DPKO argues, local women
may experience fewer difficulties in reporting sexual violence
and abuse. The response from member states, however, has been
poor, with an overwhelming majority of men being sent as peacekeepers,
year in and year out. Of the 192 member states, Nigeria took the
lead in providing about 49 women police officers by the end of
last year, followed by India and Bangladesh with 34 each, and
the United States with 24.
India has sent its all-female police contingent to the U.N. Mission
in Liberia (UNMIL), while Nigeria has pledged a similar police
contingent to support the African Union mission in Darfur, Sudan
later this year. As more and more peacekeepers are accused of
sexual abuse, there is a prevailing view that such crimes could
be reduced or eliminated if there is an increase in women military
and police personnel.
Jane Holl Lute, assistant secretary-general for mission support
in DPKO, told reporters last month that the reputation of U.N.
peacekeeping was one of its most powerful assets, "which
was why the organisation had responded so strongly to the issue
of sexual exploitation and abuse by its peacekeepers, and addressed
it structurally and systematically."
She said that, between January 2004 and November 2006, the United
Nations had completed investigations against 319 peacekeeping
personnel, resulting in dismissals of 18 civilians and the repatriation
of 17 police and 144 military personnel. But the degree of punishment,
she pointed out, was within the purview of the member state concerned,
not with the United Nations.
The action that the United Nations could take was relatively limited,
as it depended on the sovereign authority of the member states
consistent with the country's own military codes of justice and
national laws. However, member states have been supportive of
U.N. efforts to implement the comprehensive programme against
sexual exploitation and abuse by peacekeepers, she added.
Among Bangladeshi peacekeepers who were repatriated on charges
of sexual abuse, one had been dismissed from service, two had
been lowered in rank, and two other officers had been severely
reprimanded.
Jessica Neuwirth of the New York-based Equality Now says the rising
number of reported incidents of rape and sexual abuse by U.N.
peacekeepers, and the growing public demand for accountability,
has highlighted a gap in the jurisdiction of the United Nations
to ensure that peacekeepers conduct themselves in accordance with
U.N. rules and respect for human rights.
"What happens to U.N. peacekeepers accused of misconduct,
if anything, is that they are simply repatriated to their home
countries, where often they are not tried for the crimes of which
they have been accused," she told IPS.
"Even if they were to be tried, it might be difficult to
produce evidence and witnesses, who are often very far away from
the home country of the peacekeeper," Neuwirth added. She
said the United Nations needs to address this problem, at least
by requiring more effectively that peacekeeper-contributing countries
prosecute those accused of committing crimes of sexual violence,
and other crimes.
Ideally, she said, those who serve among the ranks of U.N. peacekeepers
should submit to some type of U.N. jurisdiction that would enable
the United Nations to take disciplinary action and perhaps work
with national jurisdictions to facilitate criminal prosecution.
"In the interim, one immediate step that could be taken by
the United Nations is to ensure that peacekeepers accused of misconduct
are not sent back to other U.N. missions, and to encourage contributing
countries to include more women among the troops they send,"
Neuwirth said.
In many countries, she added, women suffer state-sanctioned discrimination
in the military even at the formal level where they are excluded
from service.
The United Nations should play a more active role in urging governments
to remove these barriers, in accordance with the commitments made
by governments in the Commission on the Elimination of Discrimination
Against Women (CEDAW), the 1995 Beijing Platform for Action, and
many other international human rights instruments that prohibit
discrimination against women.
More women in peacekeeping efforts would benefit the United Nations
in many ways, and would no doubt result in less incidence of and
more accountability for sexual violence, Neuwirth said.
from:http://peacejournalism.com/ReadArticle.asp?ArticleID=17672
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