UN:
Its All about women
Elayne
Clift
In
2000, the United Nations took a long overdue step: It "remember
[ed] the ladies" in peace and security issues. In that year, the
UN Security Council adopted Resolution 1325 (R 1325) on Women, Peace
and Security. By doing so the Council affirmed, for the first time,
that integrating a gender perspective and ensuring women's participation
are necessary at all stages of armed conflict as well as pre or post
conflict. An independent expert assessment was also commissioned by
UNIFEM, adding to a growing body of analysis on the matter. Since then,
women's organisations around the world have been working and collaborating
on a set of concrete activities that the UN, governments, NGOs, academics
and others can and should be doing to address implementation of Resolution
1325. And as the annual meeting of the UN Commission on the Status of
Women is to be held in March 2004 - where one of the topics to be discussed
is women, peace, and security - the resolution takes on new urgency.
As Carol Cohn noted recently in The Women's Review of Books, "Resolution
1325 breaks new ground because it not only recognises that women have
been active in peace-building and conflict prevention; it also recognises
women's right to participate - as decision makers at all levels - in
conflict prevention, conflict resolution, and peace-building processes....
The resolution recognises that women are disproportionately victimised
in wars and calls upon all parties to armed conflict to take special
measures to respect women's rights." Understandably, the resolution
has an active constituency. Women from nations all over the globe are
mobilising to put pressure on the Security Council with a view to implementation.
They are advocating for several specific steps to be taken, including
having women participate in Security Council missions or serve as UN
special envoys, having more women engaged in field operations, increasing
gender-sensitive training, mainstreaming gender perspectives, especially
in peacekeeping, and having the Security Council consult regularly with
women's groups. With women comprising more than half the world's population,
it should go without saying that women take part in peace negotiations
in war-torn countries. Such negotiations are the first step towards
building a post-conflict society; women need to be part of the process
of shaping their own futures, as any Afghan or Iraqi woman knows. This
is not only a political perspective; it is a practical one. Women are
the caretakers, and they keep life going during and after war. They
know what it takes to make society function, and they have proven themselves
to be remarkably adept and innovative during hard times. Typically,
they want to have contact with other women from all sides, and together,
they envision alternatives and viable ways to solve problems and to
heal rifts. In a 2002 statement to the Security Council on women, peace
and security, Kofi Annan pointed to the fact that "existing inequalities
between women and men, and patterns of discrimination against women
and girls, tend to be exacerbated in armed conflict." Citing the
preponderance of women and children as the world's refugees and internally
displaced persons, and the problems unique to females during armed conflict,
he noted that "if women suffer the impact of conflict disproportionately,
they are also the key to the solution of conflict. Women's groups and
networks at grassroots level have provided many examples of the imaginative
strategies and flexible approaches required for effective conflict prevention."
He was right about women's skill with imaginative strategies. In Melanesia,
for example, women have established women's community media to share
information in the hopes of making R 1325 a reality at the local level.
Women in the Democratic Republic of Congo pressured their governments
to honour their signatures to the resolution and lobbied hard for its
implementation. In Kosovo, women translated R 1325 into multiple local
languages and removed the UN jargon from the document in order to make
it more accessible. With help from Italian women, they secured funding
to sponsor several TV programs explaining the resolution. Iraqi women
held a workshop to explain it to lawyers and others. Why are so many
women mobilised around this resolution? Because it's an amazing opportunity
to move away from militarism, to affirm women's rights, to make the
world safer, to transform the way we live. If such transcendence is
possible, it will take the full participation of women, and a genuine
appreciation for a gender perspective on human society. There is always
the chance that Resolution 1325 will not move beyond the rhetorical
commitment for which the UN is noted. Approved but not implemented,
it could languish as one of numerous documents that make its authors
feel good while women go on being treated as wartime booty. But somehow
that doesn't seem likely. There are just too many good women who care
and who are active in seeing it through, country by country. As Carol
Cohn noted, "What makes 1325 unique is that it is both the product
of and the armature for a massive mobilisation of women's political
energies." There's no way of stopping that kind of energy; just
ask anyone who was in Beijing in 1995 for the 4th World Conference on
Women. When it comes to women's peace and security, we are a tireless
force - a veritable army, you might say.
Source:
News Network