Title: Introducing the Commonwealth - PowerPoint Presentation
1 Presentation on Women Peace and Security in the
Commonwealth
Kemi Ogunsanya, Adviser Gender
Section Commonwealth Secretariat, London at
the CPA-UK Gender and Politics Conference, London
7 November 2012
2- Introductions
- CW believes that womens role as change agents is
pivotal to the achievement of sustainable peace,
development and democracy across the globe - The challenge for the CW is to demonstrate impact
of womens contribution to peace and democracy in
member countries - Women should be able to influence decisions and
contribute to peace and sustainable development - Their social, economic and political empowerment
should form part of the democratic ideals in
accordance with global mandates
3- Introductions
- UN Resolution 1325 and follow-up resolutions,
made an urgent call for the - equal participation and full involvement of women
in all efforts for the maintenance and promotion
of peace and security, and - increased role of women in leadership and
decision-making with regards to peace-making,
peacekeeping, conflict prevention and resolution. - The Commonwealth is guided by these resolutions
encapsulated in the CW Plan of Action for Gender
Equality 2005-2015 (PoA), which draws on
international commitments for the realisation of
womens rights enshrined in - Convention for the Elimination of Discrimination
Against Women (CEDAW), 1979 - Beijing Platform for Action, 1995
- Millennium Development Goals and
- other agreements on health and education targets.
4- PoA Key Actions and Targets for Member States
- Promote womens full participation at all stages
of the peacebuilding processes including formal
and informal negotiations and agreements. - Include gender equality in peace and conflict
management processes - Mainstream women in the training of peacekeepers,
armed, police forces and partners to ensure
appropriate codes of conduct - Confront gender bias in public and private sector
recruitment, and in the media and peace
operations - Ensure women make up at least 30 of
decision-makers in peace processes, government
and business by 2015
5- PoA Key Actions and Targets for the Secretariat
- Support countries to address specific needs of
women, men and young people in conflict and
post-conflict situations including child soldiers
and victims of rape - Support member states to gather relevant data
that is sex and age specific to monitor all forms
of gender-based violence - Support leadership to enable women to seek and
advance political careers through
capacity-building programmes and projects
6- Challenges of women in armed conflicts
- Women and men experience conflict differently
women and girls are by-products of war and armed
conflicts - In peace time, women and girls are subjected to
gross sexual abuse and violations in the home,
community and society - Vulnerable to abuse, sexual slavery,
exploitation, human trafficking and punitive
traditional practices - In specific situations women have participated
and contributed to war to a minimal degree (3)
Photo Zainab Hawa Bangura (Sierra Leone) SRSG on
Sexual Violence and Conflict, June 2012
7Why Women?
- The participation of women is indispensable
because of their social, economic and political
roles - Out of the two billion peoples in the CW, women
and girls are half of the worlds population - Women have contributed significantly in peace
processes, preventive diplomacy, capacity
building initiatives, post-conflict
reconstruction and peacebuilding - Women have served as mediators between combating
parties, and brokered ceasefire and peace
agreements - Have transformed governance and decision-making
processes across CW regions
8- CW Women and peace negotiations/agreements
- In specific circumstances women are not allowed
to seat at peace tables - An analytical study of 585 peace agreements
signed between 1990 and 2010 reveals only 16
contained references to women in qualitative
terms (biologically) - Yet they have played effective roles in
peace-making, peacekeeping, peacebuilding and
post-conflict reconstruction in Pakistan, Rwanda,
Sierra Leone, South Africa, Sri Lanka and Uganda - Currently only three CW countries are in
post-conflict Pakistan, Sierra Leone and Sri
Lanka (Fiji suspended)
9- CW Women and Peacekeeping
- 4 CW countries top contribution of military and
police personnel to UN PSOs in 2012 Bangladesh,
India, Nigeria and Pakistan. - Nigeria, Ghana, South Africa, Bangladesh and
Rwanda rank high in contribution of female
troops. This accounts for 10 of Police Officers
and 3 of military personnel - Out of 30 CW countries contributing troops, only
Brunei and PNG have not contributed women
personnel - Canada deploys 10 of police women to
peacekeeping missions
10- CW Women and Peacekeeping
- Three CW countries deployed all female police
units India in Liberia, Bangladesh in Haiti
DRC, and Samoa in East Timor - In 2012, 30 percent of women constitute civilian
staff in peacekeeping and peacebuilding missions - Pacific Islands recognise the contribution of
women in conflict prevention, resolution and
peacebuilding efforts
Photo Arrival of all Female Indian Officers to
UN Mission in Liberia
11- CW Women and Peacekeeping
- In 2012 there are six Women SRSGs DSRSGs two
are from the CW with one Special Envoy - Margaret Vogt from Nigeria SRSG to CAR and
Ameerah Haq from Bangladesh SRSG to Timor-Leste
in 2010 - Zainab Hawa Bangura from Sierra Leone SRSG on
Sexual Violence in Conflict (UNSCR1820), June
2012 - Radhika Coomaraswamy from Sri Lanka former SRSG
for Children and Armed conflict as at 31 July
2012 - Dr Asha-Rose Migiro of Tanzania recently
appointed Special Envoy for HIV and AIDS in
Africa in July 2012, previously held by Elizabeth
Mataka from Botswana. Dr Migiro served as UN Dep
Sec-Gen from 2007 - 2012
12- Contributions of Women Peacekeepers
- Improved intelligence gathering
- Interviewing survivors of gender-based violence
- Effectiveness of operational procedures
- Ability to work in conservative environments
- Provide security to women and girls
- Reduction in conflict confrontation
- Empowerment of community women girls
- Highlight diversity, inclusion and gender
equality - Support female ex-combatants in DDR process
- Expand skills and approaches in peacekeeping
missions
Photo Arrival of all Female Bangladeshi Officers
to Haiti
13- CW Women and Peacebuilding
- New Publication on 1325 National Action Plans
- Six CW countries have adopted NAPs
- Australia (2012)
- Canada (2010)
- Rwanda (2010)
- Sierra Leone (2010)
- Uganda (2008)
- United Kingdom (revised 2011)
- Developing a framework to support member states
adopt and implement NAPs
Photo CW New Publication on Gender, Peace and
Security
14Commonwealth Women and Peacebuilding
- Adoption Implementation of National Action
Plans - Some members are in the process of adopting NAPs
e.g. South Africa - Other countries have in place gender
mainstreaming mechanisms - The Secretariat will
- Advise governments to increase participation of
women in peacekeeping and peacebuilding missions - Urge members to provide required resources,
training and capacity building initiatives for
women to participate effectively in these
processes - Monitor and evaluate adoption and implementation
of NAPs with member states - Recommend penalties for non-compliance at all
levels across all sectors
15UN delegation to the International Association of
Women Police annual conference in Minneapolis,
USA. Photo by Irene Ang