---------- Forwarded message ----------

------ Forwarded Message ------
From: "MADRE" <[email protected]>
To: "Micheal Eisenscher" <[email protected]>
Sent: 10/27/2014 1:21:20 PM
Subject: International Campaign Warns: No Women, No Peace in Iraq

International Campaign Warns: No Women, No Peace in Iraq

(October 27, 2014) - As world powers deploy military missions to fight
ISIL*, the International Campaign to Stop Rape & Gender Violence in
Conflict is urging them to prioritize ending widespread sexual violence
by ISIL and other militant groups in Iraq. The Campaign also warns that
without the inclusion of Iraqi women in diplomatic efforts to establish
peace, violence will worsen.

"With their monstrous tactics, ISIL has turned Iraqi women's lives into
a nightmare," said Yanar Mohammed, President of the Organization of
Women's Freedom in Iraq, a Campaign member. "Women in communities under
ISIL control have witnessed beheading of their husbands and sons, and
fear to be sold with their daughters as spoils of war to become sexual
slaves for princes of ISIL. We are raising our voices to the
international community, to say that our lives matter and that the world
cannot ignore these violations of Iraqi women's human rights."

The Campaign welcomed recent United Nations (UN) investigations into
ISIL's brutal campaign of sexual violence in Iraq and Syria, which
revealed that ISIL has forced an estimated 1,500 women and children into
sexual slavery. However, the coalition of Nobel peace laureates, civil
society organizations and sexual violence survivors says world leaders
must take more comprehensive action to end rape and gender violence in
the region, including responding to the Iraqi military's use of rape and
torture as tools of intimidation, as reported by Human Rights Watch,
another member of the Campaign. The Campaign says international leaders
must pressure Iraq to end illegal detention and sexual violence by its
security forces and prosecute all responsible for these crimes.

"In Iraq, there was rape, honour killings, kidnappings, trafficking and
sexual exploitation before ISIL gave it ideological underpinning," said
Madeleine Rees, Secretary General of the Women's International League
for Peace and Freedom, a Campaign member. "If you don't address violence
against women and have a society that accepts it, you get an ISIL. The
dividing line is thin--so thin that for women, its difficult to see the
difference between war and so-called peace. The lesson must finally be
learnt that there is no alternative but to have women in
decision-making, or there will be no such thing as real protection or
real security."

The Campaign warns that without the inclusion of women in all diplomatic
negotiations on Iraq--prescribed by UN Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace
and Security--efforts to establish peace will fail. It points to the
exclusion of women from Syrian peace talks and deteriorating conditions
in Syria as an example to avoid. The Campaign also calls on the
international community to increase resources for local Iraqi women's
groups supporting survivors and working for peace.

"Iraqi women are specific targets of ISIL brutality and the first to
respond to the needs of sexual violence survivors," said Yifat Susskind,
Executive Director of Campaign member, MADRE. "These grassroots
activists recognize danger first and are risking their lives to offer
women refuge from danger. Their knowledge is essential to ending
conflict and sexual violence in Iraq."

MADRE works closely with the Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq,
which runs emergency phone lines and a safe house for women fleeing
ISIL. In September, both organizations called on the UN and other
international leaders to pressure the Iraqi government to change laws
and norms making women and children more vulnerable to violence. These
include Iraq's pending Ja'afari legislation, which would change the
legal marriage age for girls to 9-years-old and permit marital rape, as
well as current laws and government practices that deny shelter for
women and prevent NGOs from running private shelters for displaced
families and individuals.

The Campaign urges world leaders to tackle the severe need for
psychological care in Iraq. Rates of serious mental health disorders are
already at a critical high in neighbouring Syria--made worse with
increasing ISIL kidnappings, sexual and other forms of violence. It also
says survivors need the full range of medical, legal and livelihood
services to rebuild their lives and communities.

*The militant group refers to itself as the "Islamic State," but is also
commonly referred to as ISIL, ISIS, and DA'ISH/DAESH.

For Interviews, Contact:

Kat Noel
MADRE Media Coordinator
[email protected]
+1 212 627 0444

Rosella Chibambo
Associate, International Campaign to Stop Rape & Gender Violence in
Conflict
[email protected]
+1 613 899-1623
+1 613 569-8400, ext. 118

Interviews with Campaign members, including Yanar Mohammed (President,
Organization of Women's Freedom in Iraq), Madeleine Rees (Secretary
General, Women's International League for Peace and Freedom) and Yifat
Susskind (Executive Director, MADRE) are available.

###

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Address postal inquiries to:
MADRE
121 W 27TH St Ste 301
New York, NY 10001-6299
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