| Women's International League
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WILPF Statement on UN Day, 24 October 2007 Sixty-two years ago, a generation that had experienced the horror of war devised the structure, aims and principles of the United Nations, by which peoples and governments commit to work together to prevent and eliminate war and cooperate to build conditions for peace. That war is preventable – that succeeding generations can be saved from the scourge of war itself – is a concept that 192 countries have affirmed by joining the UN. Some wars have been prevented; too many have not. Through this essential international forum, all nations can meet on an equal basis to establish and implement international law and treaties. At the UN governments can and have promoted social progress and better standards of life in larger freedom. Human rights standards have been defined and defended, and enormous strides forward have been made to affirm and protect the equal rights of women and men through the UN. The United Nations has achieved a lot, yet is maligned and denigrated. At the same time it is expected to resolve all the ills of the world, but in the name of efficiency, with reduced human and economic resources. While UN information centres are closed down, while translation services are cut that inhibit effective communication among governments, and while departments are cut and rationalised, military spending by governments soars to beyond the absurd Cold War levels. Get back to the Charter: WILPF believes it is time to undertake a Universal Periodic Review of all UN Member States of how they live up to their commitments, not only in the human rights field, but under the United Nations Charter as a whole. Women’s participation in decision-making is essential for human security and human rights: As acknowledged by the Security Council resolution 1325, to be legitimate and democratic, decision-making must be shared; tables seated only by men, or a vast majority of men, are simply not acceptable in 2007. The Security Council has failed: Sixty-two years after the fact the Security Council has failed to deliver on an essential task outlined in Article 26 of the UN Charter, which requires it to deliver a plan for the “least diversion of human and economic resources to armament.” Instead, the permanent 5 members of the Security Council have participated in arms races and weapons profiteering; they have promoted insecurity. Sixty-two years late is very late indeed, but better late than never – the Security Council must deliver the Article 26 plan to stop wasting the world’s wealth on weapons that kill and mutilate. Governments should reduce military spending and report annually to the UN's international standardized reporting of military expenditures, established under UN General Assembly Resolution 46/25. These resources should be reallocating to tackling the real daily threats to human security such as climate change, the distribution of wealth, hunger, organised crime, and trafficking in drugs, people and arms. Peace in the Middle East must be on the basis of UN resolutions: Efforts for peace between Israel and Palestine should take place within the United Nations and be based on the principles established through UN resolutions: Security Council Resolution 242 (1967) calls for the withdrawal of Israeli armed forces from territories occupied, Security Council resolution 252 (1968) highlights the inadmissibility of the acquisition of territory by military conquest, Security Council resolution 271 (1969) addresses Jerusalem, Security Council resolution 338 (1973), reaffirms resolution 465 (1980), addressing Israel’s illegal demographic changes, resolution 476 (1980) and resolution 681 (1980) both similarly address fundamental issues related to Israel's illegal occupation. WILPF calls on Secretary-General Ban-Ki Moon to convene a high-level negotiation and peace process within the UN, and calls on the international community to apply pressure and create an enabling environment for the negotiation of a zone free of nuclear and all weapons of mass destruction in the region.
The Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom was founded in 1915, and from the outset called for an “organization of the society of nations.” In 1919 the organisation welcomed the establishment of the League of Nations and actively followed its work. In 1948, WILPF was in the first group of non-governmental organisations (NGOs) to receive consultative status with the United Nations through the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC), under Article 71 of the UN Charter, the entry point for NGOs. Since its establishment, WILPF has been present and supportive of the United Nations, our world’s peace organisation, but has also often been critical when governments, who drive and comprise the UN, fail to uphold the spirit and letter of the UN Charter. For a printer friendly version of this statement, please click here. |
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