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Canadian women lead the way |
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Contributed by Berlynn
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Sunday, 20 May 2007 |
Despite the Harperites recent attacks on women's organizations, Canadian women continue to lead the way, locally and internationally, in campaigns to improve the situation for women around the world.
From the Nairobi Declaration website:
Drafted by representatives of women’s rights
organizations from six continents and endorsed by leading international
human rights advocates including Stephen Lewis, former UN Special Envoy
for HIV/AIDS in Africa, the Nairobi Declaration
is founded on the experiences of women and girl survivors of sexual
violence and the expertise of activists and jurists who are helping
them rebuild their lives. At the Declaration’s core is the belief that
justice for women and girl survivors of sexual violence will never be
achieved if reparations programs are not informed and directed by those
they are meant to serve. The Nairobi
Declaration
aims to correct the systemic flaws of national Truth and Reconciliation
initiatives and existing reparation schemes and to inform those being
developed by the International Criminal Court.The Nairobi
Declaration
asserts that reparation programs must go beyond mere compensation and
restitution. According to the Declaration, adequate reparation and
remedy must:
- Empower women and girls, support their efforts to rebuild
trust and relations and foster their participation in social
reconstruction. Decision-making about reparations must include victims
as full participants.
- Address social inequalities and discrimination in
existence
prior to conflict, which lie at the root of violence against women and
girls in times of conflict.
- Promote social justice and encourage the transformation
toward a fair and equal society.
- Emphasize the importance of truth-telling in order to
allow
women and girls to move ahead and become true citizens. Abuses against
women must be named and recognized in order to raise awareness about
these crimes and violations, to positively influence a more holistic
strategy for reparation and measures that support reparation, and to
help build a shared memory and history.
“Reparations should provide women and girls with the tools
to
rebuild their lives not as they were prior to war or conflict, but in
ways that address and transform sociocultural injustices and structural
inequalities that predate the conflict,” says Ariane
Brunet, coordinator of the Coalition for Women’s Human Rights in
Conflict Situations. “Women
and girls’ right to reparation is not only about restitution,
compensation and access to judicial redress, it is about women playing
an active role in repairing the social fabric and building afresh a
just and equal society.”
The Nairobi
Declaration
is the first stage in a long-term international campaign on gender
reparation. It is intended as a tool to be implemented by States,
multilateral agencies, regional agencies and national entities, such as
Truth and Reconciliation Commissions.
Read the Nairobi Declaration
Sign the Nairobi Declaration
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Written by wagmitfam on 2007-05-23 11:38:17 Hah! ActUp had the story before the Toronto Star ! |
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Last Updated ( Sunday, 20 May 2007 )
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