JOINT STATEMENT TO THE
59TH SESSION OF
THE UN COMMISSION ON HUMAN
RIGHTS
Monday 31st March 2003
Delivered by Bineta
Diop, Executive Director of Femmes Africa
Solidarité (FAS)
Item 9:
Question of the violation of human rights and
fundamental freedoms in any part of the world
Thank
you, Madam Chair.
I speak on behalf
of Femmes Africa Solidarité, the Inter-African Committee on Traditional
Practices Affecting the Health of Women and Children, the International
Alliance of Women, the International Baccalaureate Organisation, the International
Council of Jewish Women, the International Council of Women, the International
Council of Social Welfare, the International Federation of University Women,
Socialist International WOMEN, Soroptomist International, Womens Federation
of World Peace, World Federation of Methodist & Uniting Church Women,
Womens International League for Peace and Freedom, World Union of Catholic Womens
Organisations, Worldwide Organisation for Women Zonta International and
Centre for Womens Global Leadership. Femmes Africa Solidarité
is also the convenor of the Working Group on Peace of the NGO Committee
on the Status of Women.
Madam Chair,
in October 2000 when the Security Council unanimously passed resolution
1325, it heralded a new area for the realisation of womens rights
through their participation in issues of peace and security by changing
the role of women not only as victims of conflict but as contributors
to peace. Their experiences as mediators and peace builders are now being
recognised. Indeed, the UN Secretary-General Kofi Annan, in a statement
to the Security Council meeting on women, peace and security, declared
that if women suffered the impact of conflicts disproportionately, they
are also the key to the solution of conflict (October 2002). He also stated
that women are better equipped than men to prevent or resolve conflicts
(October 2000).
Since
September 11, a new phenomenon which is influencing the full realisation
of womens rights, occurred. This has shifted
priorities from human security to military security to counter terrorist
attacks which do not only threaten womens physical security, but
also their economic, social and cultural rights. There is a need to reverse
these tendencies and to bring the focus to mainstream womens perspective
and gender issues into peace and security based on the Beijing Platform
of Action, CEDAW and the recent mandate emanating from Security Council
resolution 1325.
Furthermore,
the conflicts that are occurring presently violate womens political,
civil, economic, social and cultural rights, and the violation of womens
rights anywhere is the violation of womens rights everywhere. For
this reason, these violations are at the forefront of womens global
agenda. Despite our call in October 2002 to the Security Council and in
March 2003 to the Commission on the Status of Women, yet the voices of
women in present conflicts are not heard and there has been insufficient
or no consultations with womens groups in those conflicts. Learning
lessons from recent situations where women were called upon to participate
in the process of nation building, where they bear the burden of reconstruction
and reconciliation of their societies, it has to be said that they have
not been given the favourable environment to realise their human rights
and their empowerment.
The
2002 study of the Secretary-General to the Security Council on Women,
Peace and Security by the Division for the Advancement of Women issued
on the second anniversary of Resolution 1325 as well as the UNIFEM experts
assessments in 2002 on Women, War and Peace have provided further recommendations
for the implementation of the Resolution and thereby the realisation of
womens political and effective participation in peace and security
processes. We therefore strongly urge this body to ensure that article
1 of resolution 1325 referring to womens participation in decision-making
is fully implemented.
Violence
against women in all its forms is a human rights violation irregardless
of where it occurs. Rape and other violence perpetrated against women
continue to happen in war-torn countries which should be punished and
these cases should be brought before international tribunals or to the
International Criminal Court, since they constitute crimes against humanity.
Viewed against this ever-growing situation of violations of womens
human rights around the world, we urge the renewal of the mandate of the
Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women
after the present mandate has been successfully carried out for nine years.
Equal attention should be paid to the plight of refugees and internally
displaced persons, a high percentage of which are women and these numbers
are growing as new wars emerge.
Madam
Chair, we welcome your opening speech to this Commission, and your position regarding
violence against women. We also welcome the High Commissioners opening
remarks to this session reaffirming that womens participation in
all spheres of lives is essential to security, stability, and prosperity
in modern societies. These two statements highlight the international
communitys commitment to promote and protect the human rights of
women as stipulated in CEDAW and its Additional Protocol as well as the
Declaration on the Elimination of Violence Against
Women of 1993. We thus welcome this Commissions adherence to these
principles as guiding tools in your new endeavours as well as the joint
plan to be established by CSW and the High Commissioner. Indeed, existing
instruments have guided women in their efforts at realising their human
rights, especially their rights to education, food, housing, safe water,
health and participation in decision-making processes.
Recent
efforts at more decentralisation of tasks to the field offices of the
Office of the High Commissioner and the establishment of a senior gender
advisor in the High Commissioners office are also welcome. We support
the High Commissioner in his plan to focus on national systems and their
records of implementing womens rights. This will require strengthening
the links among treaty bodies such as the Committee on CEDAW and the Committee
on Economic, Social and Cultural Rights, which both call for a joint struggle
to eliminate discrimination against women in all its forms.
Thank you, Madam Chair.
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