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SOUTHERN AFRICA: Protection for women during conflict inadequate
- UNIFEM
IRIN
News
May 19, 2003
http://www.irinnews.org/report.asp?ReportID=34187
For the full report click
here
JOHANNESBURG
- The standards of protection for women affected by conflict and
the international response to their situations are "glaring
in their inadequacy", says a report commissioned by the UN
Development Fund For Women.
The report,
"Women, War and Peace: The Independent Experts' Assessment
on the Impact of Armed Conflict on Women and Women's Role in Peace-building",
found that while women are often specifically targeted during conflict,
they do not receive what they need in emergencies.
They are also
rarely included in peace-keeping initiatives and reconstruction
efforts.
"War exponentially
intensifies the inequalities that women are living with," the
report, released on Friday in South Africa, stated.
As a "direct
objective of war" in communities being torn apart by conflict,
women are more likely than men to be displaced and find themselves
vulnerable to attacks and rape while they are fleeing. If they manage
to find shelter, they have to run households in environments where,
even in peacetime, a woman on her own has few rights.
Although in
a hostile environment, without access to basic services, women are
expected to provide the necessities for themselves and their families,
which too often may mean being forced to have sex in exchange for
basic assistance and protection, the report found.
Women who try
to return home when peace agreements have been signed, worry about
their safety and, in some countries, find that because of inheritance
and land ownership laws, unless they have sons, can't claim property
that might help them support their families.
Very little
attention is paid to women's health and reproductive concerns during
conflict, though often she continues her responsibilities as carer,
helping her family, neighbours and community.
Women therefore
need reproductive as well as other health services and psychosocial
support, which should be an integral part of emergency assistance
and post-conflict reconstructions.
"It is
tragic that basic health care for war-affected women must compete
with food, shelter and landmine clearance," the report noted.
In addition,
war and HIV/AIDS are "inextricably linked" and all HIV/AIDS
programmes and funding in conflict situations must address the disproportionate
disease burden carried by women.
Over the past
two years, only four out of 15 peace operations have had dedicated
staff working on gender issues. And, although they are referred
to as gender units, or offices, they often consist of only one person.
To rectify this,
gender experts should participate at all levels of peace operations,
including technical surveys, training, staffing and programmes.
Women were also
excluded from efforts to resolve conflict, the report found.
It said that
women organising at the grassroots level often lay the groundwork
for organising across borders - in subregions and internationally.
However, they are rarely included in formal negotiations, whether
as members of political parties, civil society or special interest
groups. Nor are they present in representative numbers in post-conflict
governments.
Turning to justice,
it observed that in times of war and societal breakdown, crimes
against women reached new levels of brutality and frequency.
"Violence
does not happen randomly - it is determined and deliberate. Assaults
on individuals and basic decency must be identified, and those responsible
must be held accountable."
However, women
were rarely consulted about the form, scope and modalities for seeking
accountability.
In addition
to ensuring accountability to women within the justice system around
the world, the report also called for the UN Secretary-General to
appoint a panel of experts to assess the gaps in international and
national laws and standards pertaining to the protection of women
during and after conflict.
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