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Women

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Based on personal activism and experience with Nagarik Aawaz ... glorified as bearers of sons/martyrs, they suffer psychologically and physically ... – PowerPoint PPT presentation

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Title: Women


1
Womens Role in Peace Building
  • Second Global NRN Conference
  • Kathmandu, 7-9 October 2005

2
Introductions to this paper
  • Based on personal activism and experience with
    Nagarik Aawaz
  • On network knowledge/resource generated with
    women peace activists in the region and
    throughout the world
  • Intended to initiate inquiry, stimulate
    discussions, and deepen reflections
  • It has a focus on Nepals experience but draws
    from experience world-wide

3
Impact of conflict on women Nepal
  • Compulsive internal or external displacement
  • Increased child marriages
  • Restrictions in mobility
  • Increased workload
  • Increased emotional and psychological trauma
  • Increase in womens maternal mortality
  • Increasing unemployment or livelihood options

4
Continued
  • Increase in social, political and domestic
    violence
  • Risks for sexual assault and/abuse from both
    sides
  • Caught in the cross fire (having to cook/feed
    Maoists or work as carriers of letters/arms, and
    suffer suspicions from security forces)
  • forced recruitment particularly of adolescent
    girls from the Dalit and disadvantaged
    communities
  • situations of armed conflict allows for further
    exploitation and inhuman behaviour from those who
    take advantage of this situation

5
Impact of conflict on women South Asia
  • increase in female-headed households through
    abandonment and desertion by men and/or deaths
  • increased workload, health hazards, and stress
  • increased violence, vulnerability to be
    trafficked, or tricked/forced into prostitution
  • forced early marriages for girls or/and increased
    restrictions on mobility
  • owing to the notion of purity battles can/have
    been fought over womens bodies

6
Continued...
  • widows face loss of personal identity, social
    stigmatization, and ostrasization
  • although mothers are glorified as bearers of
    sons/martyrs, they suffer psychologically and
    physically perceiving the killings to be futile

7
Impact of the conflict on women Global
  • military bases are conducive for increased
    trafficking and prostitution
  • crime and illegal trade increases
  • domestic violence owing to use of drugs and
    alcohol in instable societies
  • enforced restrictions in womens movement
    narrowing/limiting womens agency and education
    among other
  • strengthens / increases warlords
  • societal backlash on combatant women who need
    long term support for breaking away from their
    traditional roles

8
Continued...
  • sexual abuse, violence and rape owing to the
    control over womens bodies
  • rise of fundamentalism
  • honour killing of women for tarnishing family
    honour or in anticipation of possible rape

9
Womens role in peace-building in Nepal
  • Household
  • Community level
  • Case studies activist Shakti, agency WHR,
    network Shanti-malika
  • Local level loose network and community groups
  • Spontaneous uprising Dailekh

10
Challenges
  • Since the state offers so little in the way of
    support to its citizens, the primary safety nets
    for Nepali people generally lie in the
    institutions of the family and the community.
    When these institutions are upset during times of
    conflict because of political divisions,
    displacement or migration, or disruption in
    traditional and cultural ways of life, there is
    very little else on which families can rely or
    fall back. In such situations, the question of
    responsibility towards conflict-affected widows,
    elderly, disabled/maimed, children, and orphans
    becomes very crucial and that burden rests
    primarily on women at the household and the
    community level.

11
Challenges
  • Nepals dependency on development aid makes peace
    work challenging. There are many implications
    but to give an example, Maoists have time and
    again emphasized civil society to stay away from
    funds form the US government. Yet, resource
    sharing with them is often an implied necessity
    for being able to work at the level of the local
    communities. Also development and peace work is
    increasingly becoming theme directed and project
    led. This has made development work not only
    equated to jobs as in the past, but increasingly
    mercenary as well. This further fuels the
    conflict - inevitably deepening fissures of
    inequity and injustice.

12
Challenges
  • Security risks at the personal and the
    organizational level
  • Availability of funds (womens restricted
    mobility and limited voice is an added
    obstruction)
  • lack of previous experience in doing this work
    (comparatively womens agency further lack
    analysis and experience in doing development work
    while peace work is relatively new)
  • Recruiting/sustaining qualified staff (owing to
    more lucrative opportunities in the international
    agencies)
  • Inadequate human resource capabilities (more
    challenging to find qualified women)

13
Continued..
  • inadequate logistical infrastructure in terms of
    roads, services, and communications making access
    formidable even in times of peace,
  • Maintaining an all around balance between the
    warring factions

14
To be mindful of..
  • Erosion of trust makes trust-building critical in
    times of conflict
  • confidence building measures must be a part of
    the process of all peace initiatives
  • Balance must be maintained at all times
  • Transparency and accountability is mandatory
  • Peace-building is a very time/energy/resource
    consuming process
  • Work demands creativity flexibility
  • One cannot do this work and not deal with some
    level of relief support
  • Human rights standards must be a necessary
    practice for warring factions

15
Conclusions
  • What then are the implications of womens
    exclusion from all peace processes?
  • Can the Nepali State and the Maoists in their
    senior hierarchies afford to cut off their good
    arm?
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