Subject: [fem-women2000 185] Women and Armed Conflict Caucus
From: "takasaki.ayako" <ayako.takasaki@ntt.com>
Date: Thu, 09 Mar 2000 12:42:38 +0900
Seq: 185

To: Multiple recipients of list <b5ngonews@lists.sn.apc.org>
Subject: [B5NGONEWS] Women and Armed Conflict Caucus

UNITED NATIONS COMMISSION ON THE STATUS OF WOMEN
(Forty-fourth Session) and PrepCom.

New York, 28 February - 17 March 2000
PLENARY SESSION

General Debate - Agenda Items 3 and 4

Women and Armed Conflict Caucus

Thank you Madam Chair for allowing me to present the views of the
Women and Armed Conflict Caucus

The institution of war constitutes the greatest possible obstacle to
all the objectives of the Beijing Platform for Action. Yet in most
National Plans of Action, the critical area of concern of Women and
Armed Conflict has either been excluded or merged into other areas,
such as violence against women.

We all know that the systematic and strategic targeting of civilian
populations in contemporary wars has a disproportionate effect on
women. In the review of the Beijing Platform For Action we urge
governments to recognize women as equal partners, effective actors,
experienced contributors to peace negotiations and especially peace
building. It is now time for governments to set clear benchmarks,
time lines, indicators and plans of actions to redress the exclusion
and neglect of women's participation and perspectives.

In many regions, women have not only suffered the direct consequences
of armed conflict; they have also endured decades of military
occupation by long-term military presence. Tomorrow as we commemorate
the 46th anniversary of the 'Bravo' nuclear bomb detonation close to
the surface of Bikini Atoll, just one example of the racist
experiments that colonizing governments have inflicted on the peoples
of the Pacific, we deplore the high cancer rates, low birth weights
and birth defects resultant from weapons testing and military
maneuvers.  It is also important for governments to recognize that
women living in areas of long-term military presence are in constant
threat of sexual violence.

Madam Chair, armed conflict and preparation for armed conflict exists
in every region of the world.

At this time there is an arms race in the Asia Pacific region, with
the highest imports of military equipment in the world and the
proliferation of nuclear weapons occurring there.  At the same time
we are also witnessing intrastate and regional instability in the
countries of this region.

In Africa the proliferation of war is leading to the largest amount
of refugees and displaced people 80% of whom are women, an epidemic
of HIV/AIDS, the proliferation of small arms and chronic poverty.

In the Middle East the peace process continues to falter.  In Europe,
where there was plenty of warning, conflicts were not prevented and
the issue of reconciliation continues to be neglected at the risk of
a resurgence of violence.

Latin America continues to suffer from decades of armed conflict and
external military intervention.

In the face of this women at civil society level have shown
extraordinary commitment to and capacity for the making and building
of peace through regional disarmament programs, their concerted
effort to participate in peace negotiation and reconciliation at
community and national levels.

Under the most oppressive regimes, women's groups have kept the
ideals of democracy and justice alive. In the Asia-Pacific region
women have established peace zones and peace coalitions. In West
Africa women's coalitions have played an effective role in the
implementation of regional disarmament programs and peace processes.
In the Middle East and Europe as the official peace negotiations have
faltered and failed, women's peace initiatives have continued to
build bridges over the divides.

Yet, most of these efforts are unacknowledged and unsupported at the
international level. The Women and Armed Conflict Caucus urges you to
implement the recommendations set out in the Platform for Action and
take the following steps:

* 'Convert military resources and related industries to development
and peaceful purposes'.  Women of the world want governments to set a
concrete target for reducing military expenditures.  The Women's
Peace Petition, signed by millions of women from all over the world
notes that cutting five percent of current military expenditure over
the next five years would free up half a billion dollars per day.
This money could be used for peace education and could be targetted
at reforming the structures and institutions that are at the root
cause of war.

* Ensure the equal participation of women at all levels of
decision-making in conflict prevention, management and resolution, as
well as  post-conflict reconstruction and peace building processes
through the setting of gender quotas for all peace processes, for
posts in foreign affairs departments, United Nations and national
negotiating  teams and the systematic inclusion of women's concerns
in all Security Council resolutions which should insist that women
participate equally in all peace negotiations.

* Ensure an equitable provision of physical safety and security to
all refugee and internally displaced women and girls; provide for and
increase their access to the gender-sensitive legal, social,
psychological and medical services in camps, and ensure their
participation in the planning and implementation of programs while
they are in the camps.

* Ensure an end to impunity for crimes committed against women in
situations of armed conflict and ensure redress by ratifying the ICC
treaty.

* Give women and women's organizations the support, recognition and
resources needed to strengthen and develop their peace building
efforts.

To reiterate, we need clear benchmarks, timelines, plans of action
and systems for monitoring these urgently relevant changes.   It is
not possible to implement the Platform For Action as long as the
world is beset by wars. The truth is, without real human security we
will always face real military insecurity.

Thank you.

Felicity Hill, Director
Women's International League for Peace and Freedom
United Nations Office
777 UN Plaza, New York, NY 10017, USA

Ph:  1 212 682 1265
Fax: 1 212 286 8211
email: flick@igc.apc.org
web: www.wilpf.int.ch  www.reachingcriticalwill.org


TAKASAKI AYAKO*** ayako.takasaki@ntt.com
Advanced Business Works
NTT Communications Corporation
tel +81 3 5353 3410,3498(Direct)
fax +81 3 5353 5662
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