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Women under attack in Iraq,
Afghanistan
Baghdad -
Women are facing increasing violence in Iraq, Afghanistan and
Somalia, especially when they speak out publicly to defend women's
rights, a senior U.N. official told the U.N. Security Council.
Noeleen
Heyzer, executive director of the U.N. Development Fund for Women,
called on for fresh efforts to ensure the safety of women in countries
emerging from conflicts, to provide them with jobs, and ensure that
they receive justice, including compensation for rape.
"What UNIFEM is seeing on the ground
— in Iraq, Afghanistan, Somalia — is that public space for women in
these situations is shrinking," Heyzer said Thursday. "Women are
becoming assassination targets when they dare defend women's rights in
public decision-making."
Heyzer
spoke at a daylong open council meeting on implementation of a 2000
resolution that called for women to be included in decision-making
positions at every level of striking and building on peace deals. It
also called for the prosecution of crimes against women and increased
protection of women and girls during war.
Undersecretary-General for
Peacekeeping Jean-Marie Guehenno said that, in the past year, Liberian
President Ellen Johnson Sirleaf became the first woman head of state
in Africa, Liberia adopted an anti-rape law, women in Sierra Leone
pushed for laws on human trafficking, inheritance and property rights
and women in East Timor submitted a draft domestic violence bill to
parliament.
Despite these positive developments,
he said, women face widespread insecurity and in many societies
violence is still used as a tool to control and regulate the actions
of women and girls seeking to rebuild their homes and communities.
"In Afghanistan, attacks on school
establishments put the lives of girls at risk when they attempt to
exercise their basic rights to education," Guehenno said. "Women and
girls are raped when they go out to fetch firewood in Darfur. In
Liberia, over 40 percent of women and girls surveyed have been victims
of sexual violence. In the eastern Congo, over 12,000 rapes of women
and girls have been reported in the last six months alone."
Assistant Secretary-General Rachel
Mayanja, the U.N. special adviser on women's issues, said that from
Congo and Sudan to Somalia and East Timor, she said, "women continue
to be exposed to violence or targeted by parties to the conflict ...
lacking the basic means of survival and health care."
At the same time, Mayanja said, they
remain "underrepresented in decision-making, particularly on war and
peace issues."
Assistant Secretary-General Carolyn
McAskie, who is in charge of supporting the new U.N. Peacebuilding
Commission which was established this year to help countries emerging
from conflict, said her office will try to ensure that "space is
created for women's active participation in political, economic and
social life."
"We cannot ignore the voices of the
women from the time we broker peace onwards," McAskie said.
"Peacemaking is not just an exercise involving combatants, it must
involve all of society, and that means women."
At the end of the meeting, the
council said it "remains deeply concerned by the pervasiveness of all
forms of violence against women in armed conflicts." and reiterated
its strong condemnation of all acts of sexual misconduct by U.N.
peacekeeping personnel.
Allegations of sexual abuse have also
been reported in peacekeeping missions in Congo, Bosnia, Kosovo,
Cambodia, East Timor and West Africa. -- The
Associated Press
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