WESTERN SAHARA: In Western Sahara, Women Play Large Role in Forgotten Struggle for Independence

As dusk enveloped the salmon-pink houses of this capital city, the brightly colored robes of women stood out in a mass of protesters chanting for independence from Moroccan rule.

UGANDA: Cops Lack Skills in Gender-Related Cases, Says Judge

The Police lack necessary to handle gender-related issues, Justice David Batema, has said.

Speaking at the female judges' conference at Protea Hotel in Kampala, Batema said member states in the Great Lakes region were asked to develop a police training curriculum on gender and violence so as to enable officers acquire skills in dealing with gender-related cases.

CAMBODIA: Parties' Attention Turns to Women and Children

Nearly one week into an election campaign period that has seen Phnom Penh's streets play host to thousands of political party supporters, attention turned Wednesday to policy, when representatives from seven of the eight parties running for seats delivered their manifestos on issues affecting women and children.

SIERRA LEONE: In Sierra Leone, Gender Minister Urges Women to Expose SGBV Perpetrators

The Minister of Social Welfare, Gender and Children's Affairs, Hon. Moijue Kaikai has called on women at community level to put hands on deck and collaboratively alert the police and his ministry on issues bordering on sexual and domestic violence so that the perpetrators would be brought to book.

SOUTH ASIA: South Asia Women's Network Holds Strategic Planning Workshop

The South Asia Women's Network (SWAN) found an opportunity to hold a Strategic Planning Workshop in Male (Maldives), and witness firsthand claims by scientists that the waters surrounding the Maldives have risen significantly, and that the island may disappear in less than 200 years.

DRC: Congo-Kinshasa: UN Strengthens Fight Against Wartime Rape

The U.N. Security Council unanimously adopted a resolution strengthening ways to fight the use of sexual violence as a weapon of war.

U.N. agencies estimate more than 40,000 women were raped during Liberia's civil war from 1989-2003, as many as 60,000 in the former Yugoslavia during the early 1990s, and at least 200,000 in the Democratic Republic of the Congo since 1998.

LIBERIA: Liberian women's war wounds fester

It is over a week since Ruth Flomo was last able to walk, the bullet lodged in her leg an agonising reminder of the terror of being shot in crossfire during Liberia's bloody civil war 10 years ago.

Flomo, then just a teenager, was caught in an exchange of fire between the rebel Liberians United for Reconciliation and Democracy and troops loyal to ex-president Charles Taylor as the conflict was nearing an end in 2003.

SIERRA LEONE: Sierra Leone: Women Activists Engaged On Constitutional Review

Women activists from various groups in Sierra Leone, including the Parliamentary Female Caucus, 50/50 Group and Campaign for Good Governance (CGG), among others, have ended a one-day consultative conference on the constitutional review process and how they could speak with one voice in championing the welfare of women in the country.

NIGERIA: President Banda to Attend High Level Global Women Network in Nigeria

President Dr Joyce Banda will leave the country on June 26 for Abuja Nigeria where she is expected to attend a High Level Global Women Network on 27 and 28 June 2013.

According to press release from the State House authored by Presidential Press Secretary Steve Nhlane, the President will depart through the Kamuzu International Airport in Lilongwe at 09:00 hours in the morning.

COLOMBIA: Colombia's Women Bear the Scars of a War Among Men

The hot and damp jungles of southern Colombia have been torn apart by war for more than 20 years. One of the most devastating and widely used weapons in the bloody struggle for power over this fertile and oil-rich land – once one of the biggest cocaine-producing regions in the world – is sexual violence against women.

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