WOMEN, PEACE AND SECURITY:
NEPAL
UNIFEM
WOMEN, WAR AND PEACE WEB PORTAL: NEPAL
"Women at the village level are involved in peace activities,
but their work is not acknowledged at the national level and they
have not developed linkages and networks to national level organizations.
Since last year a small number of women's organizations have been
raising the issue of conflict at the national level, but these
have no presence at the village level. Nepali women are challenged
in their peacebuilding activities by being unable to protect grass-roots
women and by the fact that civil society is divided."
Anonymous
International Alert: Gender and Peacebuilding Programme, Women
Building Peace: Sharing Know How, June 2003
"In Nepal, the opportunities for women to exchange views
and forge a common policy against violent is minimal even women
are often the main victims in situations of conflict, suffering
human rights abuses. Nepalese women believe, if they are given
an opportunity to make their voice heard, if they can bring their
own perspective to the table, the chances for lasting peace and
reconciliation will improve immeasurably. Women in Nepal always
have to bear a disproportionate burden of poverty and they have
painful experience arising from the uncontrolled flows of arms.
When there is lawlessness in society, women s lives are torn apart.
Many Nepalese women are living a miserable life, are not educated,
do not have access to health facilities and safe drinking water.
Nepalese women can not forget how women with political power does
not mean improvement overall in women s political, economic or
social status [
] Nepalese women must have a right to be
involved in all peace processes because displaced women are the
real problem in Nepal. If Nepalese women are to play an equal
part in security and maintaining peace, they must be empowered
politically and economically. In the last general elections held
on may 1999, out of 2238 candidates for 205 seats only 135 were
women and as many as 113 constituencies did not have any women
candidate at all. As a result, the elections to the local bodies
held on 1997 and 1998, returned more than 40,000 women representatives.
It constitutes almost 20% of all the elected office bearers. They
must be empowered at all levels of decision- making, both at the
pre-conflict stage as well as at the point of peacekeeping, peace-building,
reconciliation and reconstruction."
Ms.
Kamala Sarup presently the vice president of International Nepali
Literary Society (INLS), Washington D.C is a USA correspondent
for the Peoples Review, English National Weekly and correspondent
for ASMITA Womens publication house.