Femnet 2
Violence Against Women
Visible wars and invisible girls
In a war children constituted a major percentage of war
death in the contemporary world. Children ore maimed tortured and , forced to fight and killed in numbers
that rival adult civilian casualties and outnumber those of soldiers. These
youthful causalities were Longley invisible as in the case always attention is given to Boys
The invisibility of children in war is not at first
appointment. Every war has the harrow image of the child victim. The gaunt eyed
child looking out from behind the looked wire force. I conducted field research
in 2009, 2010 in the post war gears. During this time I have listened to
hundreds of girls on their experiences of war, and seen hundreds more survive
or die on the fronts of violence.
The girls are raped in war and prostituted in peace time. I
have cost the clear distinction dividing war and peace. It is a step that reach
us into questions of who benefits from
war.
The vast majority of child sexual abuse involves order men
abusing young girls. Those who are encouraged to use sexual violence in war
have females and personal lives themselves and a number carry these kinds of
abusive actives back into this communities
with them. Studies shows that domestic violence increase dramatically
during war and that people in uniform show listen roles of domestic and sexual
violence both in war and out. The legal systems have so rarely prosecuted
violators of children rights.
When girls are raped, starved, overworked and killed across
wars. There are several reasons and explanations given.
Militarizes use of dirty war terror tactics against civilians
in an effort to control populations
through intimidate and fear war tactics have become increasingly common
to wars in general.
the message transmitted is that if a state is so weak as to
allow this to happen to its children and girls, how can it possibly have the
political and moral strength to govern
the people.
Children must only depend
on adults to protect these risks. They do not have direct access to UN
forums and decision making Bodies to directly represent themselves in courts
of law. They even do not know what
their rights are.
·
A law cannot enforce itself. Laws, charters,
protocols and conventions exist prescribing each and every HR abuse.
UN Women’s 10 Recommendation
1. Support
women’s legal organization:
In many countries where government – funded,
legal aid is limited. Women’s legal organizations are one of the only source
women have to get legal advice and to use the legal system to protect
themselves and their rights. Women’s legal organizations are also transforming
the legal landscape, by pushing reform efforts and championing strategic
litigation cases.
2. Implement
gender sensitive law reform;
Gender-sensitive law reform demands that
action is taken to repeal laws that explicitly discriminate against women, to
extend the rule of law to the private domain, and to address the actual impact
of law on women’s lives. The reports cites the convention on the Elimination of
all forms of discrimination against Women (CEDAW) as a gold standard for gender
– sensitive legal reform, but highlights that it remains one of reservations.
The report calls on U.N member states to accept all provisions of the
convention, especially Article 16, which guarantees women’s rights within
marriage and the family.
3. Bring
vital services under one roof:
To avoid cases from being dropped, Governments
should improve the justice chain. It must make known the series of steps that a
women must take to seek justice else we will continue to see high levels of
cases being dropped, as they move along the justice system. One way to reduce
attrition is to create one – stop shops, where vital services are also
provided. For example: Thuthuzela care centers in south Africa aim to address
the medical and social needs of assault survivors, reduce secondary
victimization and improve conviction rates by providing emergency medical care,
counseling, and court preparation.
4. Put
women on the frontline of law enforcement:
Employing more women on the front of the
justice service delivery is necessary to help increase women’s access to the
justice system. In particular it is an essential investment to employ more
women police officers and create well – staffed and resourced gender desks.
5. Invest
in women’s access to justice:
Making justice systems work for women,
requires reversing the trend of low targeted funding or aid for legal programs
focusing on gender equality.
6. Train
judges and monitor decision:
Track judicial decision making at the national
level to ensure accountability to women seeking justice and enable civil
society organization to monitor the applications of laws. offering specialized
training to judges can also build commitment to gender equality.
7. Increase
women’s access to courts and truth commissions during and after conflict:
International courts should prioritize gender
– based crimes in their prosecution strategies . In addition, women should play
a central role in defining the scope and purpose of all post conflict justice
mechanism such as truth commissions.
8. Implement
gender – responsive – reparations programs:
Governments and the international community
should establish reparations programs that account for all forms of sexual and
gender based violence. They should also include reparations at the individual
community and symbolic level to help victims recover losses and have their
sufferings recognized.
9. Use
quotas to boost the number of women legislators:
The report states that quotas for boosting the
number of women legislators are often correlated with the passage of
progressive laws on land rights, violence against women, health care and
employment.
10. Put
gender equality at the heart of millennium Development Goals: Governments
should scale up investment and action on
the eight MDGs to reduce widespread inequality and accelerate progress towards
the goals.