Mercy Global Concern - 2004

Women Still Excluded from Peace Table Despite
thier Pivotal Role, says Annan
New York, Oct 28 2004 5:00PM
Women remain overwhelmingly excluded from participating in
peace talks and post-conflict reconstruction, and continue
to suffer physical and sexual violence during war, Secretary-General
Kofi Annan says in a report on women, peace and security.
Mr. Annan's www.un.org/Docs/journal/asp/ws.asp?m=S/2004/814 report,
discussed in the Security Council today, says gender perspectives
are not systematically included in the planning, implementation,
monitoring and reporting of any area of peace and security work.
Even though women can play a crucial role in identifying and
defusing tensions before they turn into open hostilities, too
often they are ignored at the peace table, Mr. Annan says.
"The number of women who participate in formal peace processes
remains small," according to the report. "The leadership
of parties to conflict is male-dominated and men are chosen to
participate at the peace table. The desire to bring peace at any
cost may result in a failure to involve women and consider their
needs and concerns."
The Secretary-General cites many examples of women's movements
contributing to peace processes in recent years, including
in Liberia, Northern Ireland, Colombia and the Democratic Republic
of the Congo (DRC). The report has been issued to measure the
progress achieved since the Council adopted a resolution in 2000
that called
for women to have equal participation in peace-building efforts
and spotlighted the violence and abuse suffered by women and
girls during conflicts.
Mr. Annan says that violence against
women continues unabated and describes the international community's
collective response
on the issue as inadequate. "The facts on the ground point
to our collective failure in preventing such violence and protecting
women and girls from
the horrors of gender-based violence and heinous violations of international
human rights, criminal and humanitarian law."
State military organizations and rebel groups are both responsible
for violations, he adds, including murders, rapes, abductions,
torture and acts of sexual slavery. Some of the worst examples
have occurred in Sudan's Darfur region, Afghanistan and Burundi,
the report says.
The fact that UN personnel have also been
involved in abuse cases, such as in the DRC, "is particularly
abhorrent and unacceptable."
Mr. Annan says courts and tribunals such as the International
Criminal Court (ICC) show that there are ways to punish people
who commit these kinds of crimes against women, but governments
must be willing to play their part and bring the perpetrators
to justice.
The Secretary-General says there have been some
positive signs in the four years since the passage of the Council
resolution,
including a greater global understanding of the specific
impact of war on women and girls and the important role that
women
can play in resolving conflicts and re-establishing peace.
He also notes that the UN and many individual Member States have
taken steps to improve the gender balance in peacekeeping
missions
and to ensure that peacekeepers are specifically trained on the
protection of women.
Many States are actively recruiting women
to serve in peacekeeping contingents, especially in senior
roles. The UN has also
boosted the number of gender advisers from two in 2000 to
10 today. But numerous inequalities remain, the report notes.
For example, only two of the UN's 27 peace operations are headed
by
women.
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