Women’s Rights Activists Welcome UN Agreements on Ending Violence Against Women

FOR IMMEDIATE RELEASE: March 15, 2013

Today, the UN Member States resoundingly committed to ending violence against women and girls, including strong agreements on promoting gender equality, women’s empowerment, and ensuring reproductive rights and access to sexual and reproductive health services.

The Agreed Conclusions of the 57th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women represent another important step forward, building on the global momentum of the past twenty years, which has created a strong framework by which to end all forms of violence against women, young women, and girls.

Women’s health and rights organizations congratulated the governments who have defended the human right of women and girls to live free from all forms of violence. We have seen two weeks of intense negotiations, in which culture, tradition, and religion have been used to try to deny women their rights.

In this context an important outcome of the Agreed Conclusions is the recognition accorded to women human rights defenders, who often come under attack when they defend universal human rights, including sexual and reproductive health and rights.

The Agreed Conclusions explicitly call for accessible and affordable health care services, including sexual and reproductive health services such as emergency contraception and safe abortion, for victims of violence. For the first time the CSW Agreed Conclusions have urged governments to procure and supply female condoms. The CSW reaffirmed previous commitments made in the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action and in the Programme of Action at the International Conference on Population and Development and the key actions for its further implementation.

Governments have also recommitted to important strategies such as comprehensive sexuality education, the need to end harmful practices perpetuated in the context of negative culture and traditions, and the need to focus services based on the diverse experiences of women and girls, including indigenous women, older women, migrant women workers, women with disabilities, women living with HIV, and women who are held in state custody. The links between HIV and violence against women was noted throughout the Agreed Conclusions. The Agreed Conclusions condemned and called for action to prevent violence against women in health care settings, including forced sterilisation.

Violence against girls is also a major theme throughout the document. The Commission calls for an end to child, early and forced marriage, which is an increasing problem in many countries. Worldwide, 67 million girls are forced into marriage before the age of 18. Countries also committed to improving safety of girls on their way to and from school, at school, and in playgrounds; ensuring educational opportunities for girls who already married and/or pregnant; and preventing, investigating, and punishing acts of violence against women and girls that are perpetrated by people in positions of authority, such as teachers and religious leaders.

The Agreed Conclusions emphasize the role of men and boys in ending violence against women, and call for national policies to counteract gender stereotypes that present women and girls as subordinate to men and boys. The CSW calls on governments to engage, educate, encourage, and support men and boys to take responsibility for their sexual and reproductive behaviour and become strategic partners and allies in the prevention and elimination of all forms of discrimination and violence against women and girls.

The Agreed Conclusions emphasize the need to abolish legislation, policies, and programs that discriminate against women or have a discriminatory impact on women. The CSW also calls for women and girls’ unimpeded access to justice and to effective legal assistance. The Agreed Conclusions also recognize that small arms and light weapons aggravate violence against women and girls.

Importantly, the Agreed Conclusions recognize new issues in the campaign to end violence against women, including the need for strategies to address the role of new media; the impact of climate change on women; the need for measures to encourage businesses to act on workplace violence, but also their responsibility to support workers experiencing violence in the home; and the need for multisectoral responses to end violence against women.

In addition, discussions at this CSW showed high levels of support for governments to address violence against women and girls based on their actual or perceived sexual orientation and gender identity. There was also widespread support for addressing the problem of intimate partner violence. Although Member States at this year’s CSW failed to agree on specific language about these issues, human rights groups are confident that consensus that has been achieved on these matters throughout the UN system and will soon be reflected in Agreed Conclusions of the CSW.

However, civil society groups expressed deep concern over attempts by conservative members to derail negotiations during the CSW. Thankfully, many governments held firm on commitments to women’s rights. A statement signed of concern signed by feminist organizations during CSW is available online at http://cwgl.rutgers.edu/program-areas/gender-based-violence/csw57/statement-on-outcome-document.

The UN Commission on the Status of Women meets annually in New York and in 2013 has focused on the elimination of violence against women. Comprised of 45 Member States the CSW is the principal global policy-making body dedicated exclusively to gender equality and advancement of women with the sole aim of promoting women’s rights in political, economic, civil, social, and educational fields. Its mandate is to ensure the full implementation of existing international agreements on women’s human rights and gender equality.

 

Cross-posted via the International Women’s Health Coalition (IWHC).

A Call from the Arab Caucus at the 57th Commission on the Status of Women

We, the undersigned organizations and individuals, as represented in the Arab Caucus at the 57th Commission on the Status of Women (CSW), are deeply concerned with the role of the leadership of our countries in the negotiations on the crucial issue of violence against women and girls. At this session, our governments are increasingly using arguments based on religion, culture, tradition, or nationality to justify violence, discrimination and allow the violations against human rights and continue with impunity. This violence is particularly targeted against women, girls, ethnic and religious minorities, people who dissent from or challenge normative gender identities and sexualities.

The current positions taken by some Arab governments at this meeting is clearly not representative of civil society views, aspirations or best practices regarding the elimination and prevention of violence against women and girls within our countries. We are in fact concerned that many of our governments are taking positions, which undermine the very basis of the UDHR, which is the universality, and indivisibility of human rights.

We, as non-governmental organizations, struggle on a daily basis to provide sexual and reproductive health services, reform laws that discriminate or violate human rights, including sexual and reproductive rights, provide comprehensive sexuality education, combat violence against women and girls, including marital rape and sexual abuse, reach out to and protect groups who have been marginalized and minoritised on the basis of their ethnicity, religious sect/and or sexual orientation and gender identity, and break the cultural and societal taboos associated with sexuality.

We underline that the taboos and politicization of issues around sexuality are major hindrances to gender justice and the elimination and prevention of violence against women and girls in our countries. The denial of the existence of youth and premarital sexuality, extra-marital sexuality, sex work and same sex practices constitutes a dangerous threat to the well-being and public health in our societies. As well, as we work towards a more inclusive, just and equitable societies, the intersection of violence, poverty, race, national origin, and sexuality must be at the center of our social justice framework, language and negotiations on the status of women.

We are alarmed that the language proposed by some governments severely compromises the very intention of this meeting and in fact takes us a step back rather than forward. As members and leaders of civil society, we think that the goal of this UN meeting should be to further strengthen the commitments, language, discourse and action of many institutions and government entities in our societies.

We would like our governments to take into account that where there is any perceived conflict between States’ obligations to respect, protect, fulfill and promote human rights and social, cultural or religious norms, human rights instruments clearly state that the obligation to respect, protect, fulfill and promote human rights takes precedence.

This requires that our governments move away from an emphasis on religious and cultural specificity and relativism, and instead put their efforts to ensure restorative justice, inclusivity, and holistic policies that recognize intersectional spaces and identities women and girls of different backgrounds exist in.

Taking into account the above commitments and challenges, the Arab Caucus at the 57th Commission on the Status of Women calls upon governments to:

  • Stop using justifications based on religion, culture, tradition or nationality to block the progress of laws at all levels, including in the sphere of international law and at this 57th session of the CSW. These justifications must be challenged. The violence they cause is unacceptable and cannot ever be condoned or tolerated.
  • End the harmful use of religion, tradition, and culture to safeguard practices that perpetuate violence against women and girls.
  • Reaffirm past agreements and resolutions and recognize the rights of women and girls already existing in our countries, and work on enhancing those rights, not undermining them.
  • To adopt a definition of violence against women that encompasses violence against all women across their life spans, including girls.
  • To clearly denounce all practices which perpetuate violence against women and girls, including those which are justified on the basis of tradition, culture and religion and work on eliminating them, like female genital mutilation, early and forced marriages, marital rape, feminicide, and intimate partner violence.
  • To recognize the serious and particular situation of women and girls in countries of transition (like Egypt, Tunisia and Libya) and to take all necessary actions in cooperation with local actors to ensure that women’s rights in transition are respected, protected and fulfilled.
  • To ensure that the international community and governments investigate all violations against women and girls, in particular the escalation of violence during transitional periods and in situations of armed conflict (such as in Syria and Iraq) to put an end to impunity for the perpetrators, both state and individual actors.
  • To recognize the sensitive situation of Palestinian women living under apartheid in the occupied state of Palestine and in Israel. And To ensure that the international community and governments will take responsibility to conduct investigation on all violations against women living under apartheid and stop all kinds of impunity for the perpetrators.
  • To include recognition of, and recommendations to address violence against women human rights defenders who are at particular risk, from both State and non-state actors (such as families, community members, paramilitary groups and extremist groups) because of their gender as well as the work that they do.

Signatories

  • The Coalition for Sexual and Bodily Rights in Muslim Societies (CSBR), International
  • Nasawiya, Lebanon
  •  Collective for Research and Training on Development – Action (CRTD.A), Lebanon
  • alQaws, for Sexual and Gender Diversity in Palestinian Society, Palestine
  • Muntada: The Arab Forum for Sexuality Education and Health, Palestine
  • Association Tunisienne des Femmes Démocrates (ATFD), Tunisia
  • Egyptian Initiative for Personal Rights (EIPR), Egypt
  • The Egyptian Association for Community Participation Enhancement, Egypt
  • Association des Femmes Tunisiennes pour la Recherche sur le Développment (AFTURD), Tunisia
  • Women and Development Association in Alexandria, Egypt
  • Arab Women Organisation, Jordan
  • Lawyers for Justice and Peace (LJP), Egypt
  • Federation Against Violence Against Women (FAVAW), Egypt
  • Forum for Women In Development (FWID), Egypt

Supporters

  • Sisters in Islam, Malaysia
  • Aliansi Remaja Independen (Independent Young People Alliance), Indonesia
  •  Women and Youth Development Institute of Indonesia (WYDII), Indonesia
  • Women’s Health Foundation, Indonesia
  • Youth Interfaith Forum on Sexuality, Indonesia
  • Drag it to the Top, Pakistan
  • Equal Rights Now – Organisation against Women’s Discrimination in Iran, Iran
  • Pilipina Legal Center, The Philippines
  • Women for Women’s Human Rights (WWHR) – New Ways, Turkey
  • Rural-Urban Women And Children Development Agency (RUWACDA), Ghana
  • Clóset de Sor Juana, México
  • Venezuela Diversa Asociación Civil, Venezuela
  • Sexuality Policy Watch, Brazil
  • Shirkat Gah – Women’s Resource Centre, Pakistan
  • Women’s Research and Action Group, India
  • Institute for Women’s Empowerment, Hong Kong
  • L’Association Nationale de Protection des Femmes et Enfants Haitiens (ANAPFEH), Haiti
  • Women and Law in Southern Africa, MOZAMBIQUE 
  • Abortion Rights Coalition of Canada (ARCC), Canada
  • Women Living Under Muslim Laws (WLUML), International
  • Asian-Pacific Resource & Research Centre for Women (ARROW), International
  • Realizing Sexual and Reproductive Justice (RESURJ), International
  • Women’s Global Network for Reproductive Rights (WGNRR), International
  • International Civil Society Action Network (ICAN), International
  • Center for Women’s Global Leadership (CWGL), Rutgers University
  • International Alliance of Women/ Alliance Internationale des Femmes, International
  • Secularism Is a Women’s Issue, International
  • Women’s Learning Partnership (WLP), International
  • Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era (DAWN), International
  • Association for Women’s Rights in Development (AWID), International
To add your organization’s signature to this statement, please write to coordinator[at]csbronline.org.