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RESOLUTION 1325
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Perpetrators of violence against women must
be held to account – UN official
5 June 2008 – (UN News Center) Governments and other actors
in positions of power and influence must make it a priority to
bring perpetrators of violence against women to account, the top
United Nations human rights official said today.
“History has shown time and again that a failure to do so
emboldens perpetrators and encourages others to join their ranks,”
UN High Commissioner for Human Rights Louise Arbour said in an
address to the Human Rights Council, which is holding its eighth
session in Geneva.
Ms. Arbour noted that violence, including sexual violence, has
been committed and continues to be perpetrated in the midst of
conflict and in post-conflict societies “on a magnitude
and level of brutality that defies belief.”
Rape is deliberately used as a weapon of war in many conflicts,
and in many cases, family members are forced to watch or actually
participate in such crimes. “Such acts of unspeakable savagery
are often perpetrated in conjunction with other heinous breaches
of the law, and all too often go unpunished,” she pointed
out.
The High Commissioner said that whether perpetrated in conflict
or in peace, the root causes of violence against women are deep-seated
inequalities and discrimination. “Whether in law or in fact,
discrimination facing women and girls is still the rule rather
than the exception,” she stated. “As a result, full
equality for women, in law and practice, has yet to be achieved
in any country.”
She pointed to a recent study commissioned by her Office that
underscored that laws and customs that make women second-class
citizens and expose them to violence and inequality were still
common in most countries.
Discriminatory laws and practices are also at the root of many
cases of maternal mortality, she added, noting that early marriage,
female genital mutilation and the disrespect of women’s
safe reproductive rights are key contributors to the millions
of deaths and disabilities resulting from pregnancy and childbirth
annually.
“There is often nothing inevitable about maternal mortality.
Many of these deaths could be prevented by making women’s
welfare and the realization of all their rights a matter of priority,”
stressed the High Commissioner.
The task now is to translate commitments into concrete steps and
priorities to give real effect to women’s rights and dignity,
she stated, adding that the Council can play “a ground-breaking
role” in clearly defining maternal mortality as a human
rights issue.
From:http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=26919&Cr=&Cr1=#
To read Louise Arbour's full statement, please
click
HERE
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