UNIFEM Press release
4 March 2009

*International Women’s Day* <http://www.hrea.org/index.php?doc_id=967> is an
occasion to reflect on where we are in our struggle for equality, peace and
development, and a chance to unite and mobilize for meaningful change. This
year there is much to celebrate. The vision women marched for over a century
ago, of a life free of poverty and violence, has spread to countries around
the globe. People everywhere believe that lives of men and women can be
different, and governments have the fundamental obligation to respect,
protect, and fulfill human rights.

For over two decades, women’s rights advocates have lobbied, campaigned and
marched to put gender equality on the public policy agenda, demanding
recognition that women’s rights are human rights, and that violence against
women and girls be addressed within the human rights framework.

The Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against
Women<http://www.hrea.org/index.php?base_id=104&language_id=1&erc_doc_id=483&category_id=31&category_type=3&group=>(CEDAW),
adopted in 1979, recognized gender discrimination as the root of
violence against women. In 1993, at the World Conference on Human Rights,
governments recognized women’s rights as human rights, and that violence
against women is an abuse of these rights.

Violence against women undermines poverty reduction and development efforts;
hampers women’s agency and productivity; destroys their health; prevents
girls from attending school, and being safe; and has been a silent driver of
the rapid feminization of HIV and AIDS. It is no coincidence that the
deadline for the Secretary-General’s UNiTE to End Violence against Women
Campaign is 2015, the deadline to achieve the eight Millennium Development
Goals <http://www.hrea.org/index.php?doc_id=216>. In doing so, the campaign
locates ending violence against women alongside the eight Millennium
Development Goals — and basic to their achievement.

The 2000 Millennium Declaration recognized the global potential to realize a
new vision, and the dangers that threaten it, including gender-based
violence. The same year, the UN Security Council adopted Resolution 1325,
recognizing the impact of war on women and women’s role in peace-building.
This was strengthened in 2008 by Resolution 1820, recognizing sexual
violence in conflict as a security issue, demanding a security response.

Mid-way to 2015, the momentum is building. A total of 185 states have
ratified the CEDAW Convention, and 90 have ratified its optional protocol,
giving individuals and groups of women the right to take complaints about
violations of their rights directly to the Commission and request an
investigation. Most states have adopted laws and policies to eliminate
gender discrimination in health and education, employment and political life
and at least 89 states have some legislative provisions to address domestic
violence. Rape is now a crime in almost all states, and marital rape can be
prosecuted in at least 104 states.

Today it is vital to sustain this momentum. Gains can be reversed, as we
witness every day. While the implementation gap narrows, new threats arise,
including climate change, widespread food insecurity and a global financial
crisis that is expected to push 46 million more people into extreme poverty.
The crisis has intensified the struggle for resources — both across and
within countries — fueling the resurgence of fear and armed conflicts and
endangering progress on women’s rights. Despite more commitments, including
at the highest levels, the gaps on the ground are vast: violence against
women continues, and impunity remains the norm, rather than the exception.

This year on International Women’s Day the UN system is mobilizing to
sustain the momentum of the Secretary-General’s Campaign, focused on global
advocacy, national and regional partnerships, and UN leadership. This year
is also the 30th anniversary of CEDAW, and we need a renewed push for
universal ratification without reservations if the international community
is to fulfill the MDGs and put an end to violence against women and girls.

UNIFEM’s Say NO to Violence against Women campaign echoed the UN call to
action, mobilizing over 5 million signatures to demand governments take
action. Nearly 70 governments, including 30 Heads of State, signed on. Some
have already taken needed action — withdrawing CEDAW reservations, acceding
to its Optional
Protocol<http://www.hrea.org/index.php?base_id=104&language_id=1&erc_doc_id=907&category_id=31&category_type=3&group=>,
funding national action plans against gender-based violence and training
judiciaries and police to provide needed support. This year we are taking
the campaign to the regions, working with inter-agency teams in Africa and
Latin America and the Caribbean, demanding women’s right to a life free of
violence.

Inés Alberdi, Executive Director, UNIFEM


-- 
W A Laskar
Freelance Reporter and Human Rights Activist
with Barak Human Rights Protection Committee,
http://bhrpc.net.googlepages.com
15, Panjabari Road, Darandha, Six Mile,
Guwahati-781037, Assam, India
Cell: +919401134314

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