Recommendations and concerns based on the Afghan Women
Leaders Summit in Brussels on 4th & 5th December 2001
We congratulate
you on your efforts and achievements in the
peace negotiations to date and applaud the inclusion of two women ministers in
the newly constituted Interim Transitional Authority for Afghanistan. We are encouraged that a provision has been
made to appoint a Senior Gender Advisor for the proposed UN mission in
Afghanistan.
We are writing
to you now with the priorities and recommendations, resulting from the Afghan Women's Summit held in Brussels on the 4th and 5th of
December 2001. We would urge
that these be incorporated into the peace process. The summit was
held in response to a request from Afghan women. It was organised by the
European Women's Lobby, Equality Now, V-day, the Centre for Strategic
Initiatives of Women, and The Feminist Majority and was supported by the Gender
Advisor to the Secretary-General of the United Nations, The Global Fund for
Women, International Alert, Refugees International, UNIFEM and the Women's
Commission for Refugee Women and Children.
Fifty Afghan
women leaders, from broadly representative backgrounds, took part in the
summit. Participants included Sima Wali, primary Afghan organiser of the Summit,
Seddighe Balkhi and Amena Afzali, who came directly from the negotiations in
Bonn and a broad representation of Afghan women leaders from Afghanistan and
the wider Afghan diaspora in Iran, Pakistan, the United States and Canada.
Judge Navanethem Pillay, the South African President of the United Nations
International Criminal Tribunal for Rwanda, chaired the summit.
Five key priorities
that must be considered for sustainable peace in
Afghanistan, were identified at the summit:
·
Education and Culture
·
Human Rights and Violence Against
Women
·
Health
·
Displaced Persons and Refugees
·
A Regional Approach to Conflict Prevention
A summary of the discussion and the main recommendations for
each of these priorities is outlined below. They are by no means exhausted. The attached declaration from the summit
provides greater detail.
Education & Culture
Afghan women identified equal access to education for women as a top
priority for sustainable peace and development in Afghanistan. They emphasised the urgency to address women's and girls
needs in the transition period. The new government of Afghanistan
must integrate the expertise and representation of women in the Ministry of
Education.
Recommendations:
·
Develop an emergency plan for
re-opening schools for both girls and boys, including special provision for
orphans.
·
Appoint a woman as Minister of Education in the establishment of the
broad-based, multi-ethnic and fully representative government.
·
Include the pedagogic expertise of
the numerous Afghan women who have teaching and curriculum development skills.
·
Reintegrate of home-based schools
for girls into the mainstream schools.
·
Set up mechanisms which encourage
and ensure access to education for girls.
·
Appoint a representative gender-balanced team of scholars to revise the current according to international standards.
·
Provide training and support for
teachers and the rebuilding of schools.
·
Re-open institutes of higher
education.
·
Re-generate a representative media and culture in
Afghanistan as a healing process for the country.
Violence Against Women, Human Rights and the Legal System
In Afghanistan
women have suffered unprecedented forms of psychological, physical and sexual
violence and oppression prior to and during the Taliban regime. Afghan women leaders at the Brussels
summit, expressed that a prerequisite
to any peace process being able to move forward, is that there be an end to the
violence currently being inflicted on women.
Current gender-based violence includes forced and under-age marriage, rape, torture of women on the grounds of composure and
trafficking in women and girls. Demobilisation and address of the proliferation
of small arms and land mines is key to addressing gender-based violence, human
rights abuse and general security.
Recommendations:
·
A stabilization force should be established in
Afghanistan. This international Peace
Keeping force must be specifically trained in human rights and issues relating
to violence against women and their specific needs. It should maintain the highest degree of gender balance possible
amongst both civilian and military peacekeepers.
·
Demobilisation should involve a
major operation directed at small arms and light weapons both in rural and
urban areas; this should be coupled with a wide-reaching, accessible mine
awareness campaign.
·
Women should participate in
the emergency and any subsequent Loya Jirga (as they have in the past) to shape the reconstruction of Afghanistan.
·
Mechanisms to eradicated violence
against women need to be fully incorporated
into the rebuilding of the domestic justice system ensuring that in matters
regarding women and family law, international legal norms and standards are
used as the basis for new legislation.
·
An effort should be made to ensure
that qualified women judges are recruited regarding arrangements for civil,
criminal and personal law.
·
Afghan and other women lawyers from
the region should be included in the drafting of the new constitution based on
the 1963 constitution and any subsequent legal framework. (A list of such legal
resource women is available).
·
In all matters regarding human
rights and mechanisms set up to address human rights abuses, violence against
women and abuses to women's human rights must be effectively addressed to
ensure an end to impunity.
·
Violence against women should be
included in the proposed UN monitoring of human rights abuses. Reports should
be produced regularly and feed into the relevant bodies within Afghanistan and
the UN early warning system for the Security Council.
·
Impunity should be addressed through
the establishment of a gender-sensitive tribunal, which should include women
lawyers and judges.
Displaced Persons
and Refugees
The estimated three million Afghan refugees and additional one million
displaced persons are recognised as a central concern in the future development
of Afghanistan.
Recommendations:
·
Returnees to Afghanistan must be
guaranteed citizenship status.
·
Refugees and displaced persons
should not be forced to return to Afghanistan.
·
Time should be given for peace and
security to be established and for infrastructure to be developed before any
voluntary repatriation initiative commences.
·
The special protection needs of
women and girls should be ensured in camps, during repatriation, resettlement
and reintegration.
·
In preparation for return,
income-generating capacity building and education should be priorities in
refugee and displaced camps. Emphasis should be given to the special needs of
women and girls.
Health
The virtual non-existent provision of health facilities, particularly
for women and girls, needs to be addressed with critical urgency.
Recommendations:
·
Re-establish health centres and
ensure adequate medical staff in urban and rural areas.
·
Establish feeding schemes in rural
and urban areas to address the high-levels of malnutrition.
·
Provide accessible reproductive
health and family planning services.
·
Rebuild water and sanitation
systems.
·
Establish programmes to address the
spread of HIV/AIDS; drug use; malaria; and leshmania.
·
Provide gender-sensitive trauma
counselling.
Regional Approach to Conflict Prevention
The need to take a regional approach to conflict prevention was flagged
as crucial to the establishment of peace in Afghanistan. Economic and political interests of regional
actors in Afghanistan need to be highlighted and recognised in any
intervention.
Recommendations:
·
The maintenance of impartiality of
humanitarian and military support should be a key consideration for any
sustainable peace or development intervention for Afghanistan.
·
Transnational fundamentalism needs
to be addressed in all negotiations and interventions as a core influencing
factor.
·
The dynamics of the oil and drug
industries and their influence on conflict within Afghanistan need to be
thoroughly examined.
We are
encouraged by the Secretary General's message of support to the Afghan Women
Leader's: "to reassert the rights of
Afghan women - the right to participate actively in all sectors and levels of
society and in all stages of the work to bring peace and development to your
country" and his acknowledgment that: "there cannot be true peace and recovery in Afghanistan without a
restoration of the rights of women".
However, we
are concerned that women are only mentioned twice in the first draft of the
UN-sponsored Afghan agreement. This
does not represent a gender integrated approach and the move towards gender
mainstreaming agreed upon in Resolution 1325. The participation of women in all
aspects of decision-making in the peace negotiation, peacebuilding,
reconstruction and development of Afghanistan is crucial for success. In particular, the participation of women in
the emergency and any subsequent Loya Jirga, will be key for setting the agenda
for sustainable peace.
We request your
urgent attention to the concerns and recommendations in this letter and trust
that you will be able to integrate them into the peacebuilding and
reconstruction process in Afghanistan.
Yours sincerely
NGO Working
Group