Women Peacekeepers Can Work With Female
Victims, Set Example for Male Colleagues
By
Barbara Schoetzau
12 March 2007 - (VOA) Just one month ago the
United Nations deployed its first all-women peacekeeping unit,
a group of trained policewomen from India now serving in Liberia.
From VOA's New York Bureau, correspondent Barbara Schoetzau reports
this team is a sign of the continuing evolution of women in peacekeeping
missions.
In 2000, the United Nations adopted a landmark
resolution to address the impact of war on women and spur greater
participation of women in peace keeping. The U.N. department of
peacekeeping operations appointed Comfort Lamptey as a gender
adviser to help increase the role of women peacekeepers and study
gender issues within peacekeeping operations.
Lamptey says the resolution grew out of the advocacy
of women in war-torn regions who wanted a greater voice. Their
regional advocacy caught the attention of U.N. officials.
"During the 1990s, we saw a rise in levels
of internal conflicts in different continents, in Africa, in Asia,
Eastern Europe and all the former Soviet Union states," said
Comfort Lamptey. "I think what was clear was that while many
of them were not engaged in the processes leading up to the conflict,
they were being adversely effected by the war through violence
against women, through the fact that they have to be solely responsible
for the upkeep for their communities when the men are out fighting,
through the fact that many women are becoming widows and single
heads of households. And yet when it comes to actually helping
to find solutions to peace, in spite of the impact of the war
on them and the responsibilities that they assume during war time,
they are not being consulted."
The reaction to women peacekeepers has been mixed
in some locations, but their supporters say the advantages are
clear. In some traditional societies, it is more acceptable for
women to work with women. Lamptey has no doubt that women peacekeepers
are better able to deal with women who have been victims of violence.
"I think that in a lot of countries women
who have been subject to gender-based violence feel more comfortable
talking to a woman," she said. "In many countries where
women have been raped by men in uniform, they are more comfortable
talking to another woman than men in uniforms. Having women in
the field who are well-trained may be able to respond to women
who have been violated."
As a side benefit, U.N. officials hope that women
can set an example for male counterparts and reduce the instances
of sexual exploitation that occurred in some peacekeeping units
in recent years.
"My personal view, it's not scientific,
is that the presence of more women can actually help dilute a
macho approach to peacekeeping," noted Comfort Lamptey. "This
is my own personal belief that if you have a contingent of 50
peacekeepers that are all men, the dynamics will be different
than if you suddenly have 15 women, and 35 men."
Lamptey notes that in many societies, women peacekeepers
have provided an extra benefit: they have become role models.
"We had women from Timor Leste and Burundi
attest to the fact that the fact that we had women peacekeepers
helped them galvanize their own aspirations to either join the
local police, which we were helping to build in the case of Timor,
the few women who were there served as role models," she
said. "Similarly, in Burundi we had the head of the U.N.
mission who was a woman and the local Burundi women said they
were very inspired that the head of the UN in the country was
a woman and that strengthened their own aspirations."
Increasing the numbers of women serving in the
military components of peacekeeping missions is an ongoing struggle.
Lamptey says troop-contributing nations rarely meet the number
of requests for women made by the U.N. peacekeeping department.
India, Pakistan, Nepal, Nigeria, Ghana, Ethiopia are among the
top troop contributing countries. Lamptey says women account for
less than two percent of the military in peacekeeping operations.
Women make up four percent of the police and almost 30 percent
of the civilian staffs of missions.
From:http://www.voanews.com/english/2007-03-12-voa65.cfm