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When will they ever learn? Women,
men and peace-building
By Lesley Abdela
International Women's Day is a moment to press
global power-brokers to realise the aspiration of UN Security Council
Resolution 1325 to allow women to take their rightful place at the
heart of peace-building, says Lesley Abdela.
March 6, 2008 – (Open Democracy) The seventh International
Women's Day since the passage of the fabled United Nations Security
Council Resolution 1325 arrives on 8 March 2008 at a time when the
gap between the resolution's fine aspirations and their practical
accomplishment seems to be widening. This is particularly clear
in the area of conflict resolution and peace-building.
Resolution 1325 - passed unanimously on 31 October 2000 - was and
remains a landmark declaration by the international community in
favour of women's civic equality. The resolution calls on all United
Nations member-states to ensure the full participation of women
and the integration of a gender perspective in peace and security,
policy-making, conflict management and peace-building. It urges
UN member-states to increase the representation of women at all
decision-making levels in national, regional and international institutions
and mechanisms for the prevention, management and resolution of
conflict.
These recommendations are founded on the historic recognition that
women - if they are given the opportunity, authority and resources
- can make the difference in guaranteeing that conflicts can be
prevented or (once they arise) resolved, and that peace-building
can be sustained and successful.
Yet there are so many areas in the world where such a recognition
is being ignored even where it could make a real difference on the
ground. Where, for example, are women in Kenya's painful efforts
to overcome its post-election nightmare?
But the pattern goes much wider. This week I arrived home in Britain
after six months in Kathmandu. In Nepal, women have - despite energetic
lobbying by women NGO leaders - been conspicuous by their exclusion
from the peace talks involving the "seven-party alliance"
that has been attempting to settle disputes related to the long-running
Maoist and more recent Terai armed campaigns.
In Sri Lanka too, women's groups lobbied both domestic political
leaders and the Norwegians who were acting as peace-brokers in the
hard work of bringing the country's interminable civil war to an
end - but they made no progress, and the killing goes on. In Kosovo
and Serbia, women organised and pressured on several levels (their
own politicians, at the European parliament, at the International
Contact Group led by United Nations special envoy Martti Ahtisaari)
to demand inclusion as equal partners in negotiations on the status
of Kosovo. The contact group was composed of the United States,
United Kingdom, France, Germany, Italy, and Russia, thus including
four of the five permanent members of the UN Security Council; yet
Resolution 1325 played no part in its considerations.
What do Nepal, Kosovo and Sri Lanka (and Kenya) have in common?
These are states which have experienced terrible civil wars or severe
internal conflicts, yet in which half or more of their populations
- Nepalese women, Kosovar women, Sri Lankan women, Kenyan women
- have been excluded from their peace processes. What has happened
to UNSCR 1325, passed unanimously by the Security Council to include
women as equal partners in peace processes?
The problem of the under-representation of women could equally be
defined as the over-representation of men. The comment of one woman
from a conflict-zone at a recent conference at the Joan B Kroc Institute
for Peace and Justice has wide relevance: "In current peace
processes the peace is not for the people, it is for the male power
groups. This is the wrong focus."
Indeed, the art of peace-building is far more subtle than the practice
of warfare (in which men in power have had centuries of experience).
It requires almost opposite characteristics: among them patience,
creative dialogue, imagination, empathy, attention to the critical
minutiae, and avoidance of grandstanding.
The gap between Resolution 1325's words and the reality of today's
unresolved conflicts creates a challenge for everyone committed
to democracy and human rights: how to trigger determined commitment
from politicians to implement 1325 (and its European parliament
sister resolution, passed on 30 November 2000)?
International Women's Day in 2008 is an occasion to highlight need
and fuel energy. It is time to call, email and send text-messages
to UN Security Council members to introduce an amendment update
UNSCR 1325. This would set targets and make the resolution enforceable,
such that by 2015 all peace talks must (and not just should) comprise
at least 40% women and at least 40% men (the rest either women or
men). This would ensure that no more than 60% of any one gender
is appointed to the top decision-making levels of international
peace-talk teams.
In 2005, I wrote an article for openDemocracy which
said: "the British suffragette slogan ‘deeds not words'
keeps running through my head. Both [the UN and European parliament]
resolutions lack sanctions against non-compliance: their implementation
relies on advocacy, persuasion and goodwill. And resolutions alone
are insufficient - it is the implementation that counts" (see
"1325: deeds not words", 16 October 2005).
Two and a half years on, the situation is unchanged - as are the
underlying realities of conflict in the world. Women really can
make the difference between peace and war, and to make peace last.
Today, the suffragette slogan links in my head with the haunting
words of the anti-war song: "When will they ever learn?"
The answer is, only when women persuade them.
From:http://www.opendemocracy.net/article/democracy_power/5050/women_men_peace_building
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