Dear members and supporters of the Winnipeg Chapter for UN Women - Canada,
Just a brief update to let you know our event last week, with Global College, From Peace in the Home to Peace in the World: Challenge Militarism and End Violence Against Women, was well supported by you and the community. We did video tape most of the presentations - Marylou McPhedran, Principal Global College, with students Maddie Pearlman, and Chelsea Caldwell, with Song of Africa founder, Darcy Ataman so for those that missed it, you can see them here:
http://tinyurl.com/7k2lga4
We also sold all the chocolate bars! So that gives us a good start for our campaign to raise funds for UN Women, with funds targeted for women affected by war. Thank you everyone for your help. Special thanks to Constance Popp, who generously donated all the bars - by the way, she has some pretty special chocolate right now in her store at 1853 Portage Ave. Go and check it out - they are celebrating their 4th year!
Our next meeting will be January 31st, 7:00, at the University Women's Club, 54 West Gate, so mark the date! Details to follow -
Tomorrow is December the 6th, and many will be at the morning sunrise memorial service to commemorate Canada's Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women. I can still remember the day, 22 years ago, and the utter shock of thinking such a thing could happen - 14 young women were murdered because of their gender, right here in Canada. We all must continue to ensure women feel safe in their homes, schools, workplaces, and community - here in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, and indeed everywhere. Working together, we can make a difference.
Just received the following media release:
Just a brief update to let you know our event last week, with Global College, From Peace in the Home to Peace in the World: Challenge Militarism and End Violence Against Women, was well supported by you and the community. We did video tape most of the presentations - Marylou McPhedran, Principal Global College, with students Maddie Pearlman, and Chelsea Caldwell, with Song of Africa founder, Darcy Ataman so for those that missed it, you can see them here:
http://tinyurl.com/7k2lga4
We also sold all the chocolate bars! So that gives us a good start for our campaign to raise funds for UN Women, with funds targeted for women affected by war. Thank you everyone for your help. Special thanks to Constance Popp, who generously donated all the bars - by the way, she has some pretty special chocolate right now in her store at 1853 Portage Ave. Go and check it out - they are celebrating their 4th year!
Our next meeting will be January 31st, 7:00, at the University Women's Club, 54 West Gate, so mark the date! Details to follow -
Tomorrow is December the 6th, and many will be at the morning sunrise memorial service to commemorate Canada's Day of Remembrance and Action on Violence Against Women. I can still remember the day, 22 years ago, and the utter shock of thinking such a thing could happen - 14 young women were murdered because of their gender, right here in Canada. We all must continue to ensure women feel safe in their homes, schools, workplaces, and community - here in Winnipeg, Manitoba, Canada, and indeed everywhere. Working together, we can make a difference.
Just received the following media release:
UN Women Urges Full Participation of Afghan Women in the Road Ahead from Bonn
Commends sustained efforts of Afghan women and their engagement at the international conferenceUnited Nations, New York On 5 December 2011, Afghan women joined the more than 1,000 delegates from 100 countries attending the Bonn Conference on Afghanistan to discuss the transfer of responsibility for security to the Afghan government in the coming years. Ten years since the first Bonn Conference, the voice and position of Afghan women’s civil society remain among the most progressive and prominent in the national debates on Afghanistan’s development and the protection of human rights in the country.
As the Bonn Conference draws to an end, UN Women applauds the determined efforts of Afghan women activists who have worked relentlessly to ensure that gender equality issues remain on the agenda of Afghanistan’s Peace and Transition process.
In the lead-up to Bonn, the efforts of national gender equality advocates in government and civil society, such as the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission and the Afghan Women’s Network (AWN), have resulted in a broad-based consensus among Afghan women on their role and their expectations within the Transition and Peace processes. More visible results were a marked increase in the number of women in the official delegation to Bonn as well as a strong representation of women within civil society delegations. These efforts were supported by the United Nations in Afghanistan, with the strong support of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General and UN Women as the lead entity on gender equality.
Over the past ten years, Afghan women and the Government of Afghanistan have made remarkable advances, with the adoption of a 25-percent quota in the national constitution resulting in 25 percent women in the current Parliament, and the adoption of laws and policies to combat gender-based violence and to advance gender equality. Yet the challenges that Afghan women face are considerable. A recent study by the Afghan Ministry of Women’s Affairs and women’s groups reports that approximately 57 percent of girls in Afghanistan are married before the age of 16. The estimated literacy rate for women stands at 15.8 percent. Currently women remain marginalized in peace and transition efforts for example women constitute only 12.8 percent of thee High Peace Council.
Emerging from today’s Conference in Bonn, Afghan women hope to see stronger and more robust measures by national and local governments towards gender equality and a renewed commitment to implement the national action plan for women. Women from across the country are demanding a more inclusive peace process that gives women an active role in monitoring of reintegration efforts, and that security of women which coontinues to be a daily threat in public and private spaces beccomes a top priority for national and international actors in Afghanistan. Civil society organizations and networks are calling for more than just a seat at the table with reintegration efforts often targeting the worst perpetrators against women’s rights, they want to actively monitor peace and integration processes and provide feedback on what is working on the ground.
Over these past five months, with UN Women’s support, the Afghan Women’s Network (AWN) has brought women throughout the country together in preparation for Bonn, to put their priorities and concerns on the table. During the conference, gender equality advocates laid out a comprehensive set of recommendations, ranging from demanding a more transparent and rigorous recruitment process for the Afghan National Security Forces and local police involving women’s groups and women community leaders, to requesting government to prioritize the protection of women leaders, to ensuring the allocation of 25 30 percent of the Afghan Peace and Reintegration Programme budget for initiatives impacting women’s and girls’ access to quality education and health services, access to agricultural programmes, vocational training and other economic empowerment initiatives.
Afghan women called for an international community that is willing to make long-term commitments beyond 2014 to advance the situation of Afghan women and girls, by expanding and protecting their access to education, their economic security, their right to live free of violence, and to determine their roles and their future. As one of the Afghan women said: “Men and women are two wings of the same bird. If one wing is broken, the bird cannot take off and fly.”
Peace,
Mary
As the Bonn Conference draws to an end, UN Women applauds the determined efforts of Afghan women activists who have worked relentlessly to ensure that gender equality issues remain on the agenda of Afghanistan’s Peace and Transition process.
In the lead-up to Bonn, the efforts of national gender equality advocates in government and civil society, such as the Afghanistan Independent Human Rights Commission and the Afghan Women’s Network (AWN), have resulted in a broad-based consensus among Afghan women on their role and their expectations within the Transition and Peace processes. More visible results were a marked increase in the number of women in the official delegation to Bonn as well as a strong representation of women within civil society delegations. These efforts were supported by the United Nations in Afghanistan, with the strong support of the Special Representative of the Secretary-General and UN Women as the lead entity on gender equality.
Over the past ten years, Afghan women and the Government of Afghanistan have made remarkable advances, with the adoption of a 25-percent quota in the national constitution resulting in 25 percent women in the current Parliament, and the adoption of laws and policies to combat gender-based violence and to advance gender equality. Yet the challenges that Afghan women face are considerable. A recent study by the Afghan Ministry of Women’s Affairs and women’s groups reports that approximately 57 percent of girls in Afghanistan are married before the age of 16. The estimated literacy rate for women stands at 15.8 percent. Currently women remain marginalized in peace and transition efforts for example women constitute only 12.8 percent of thee High Peace Council.
Emerging from today’s Conference in Bonn, Afghan women hope to see stronger and more robust measures by national and local governments towards gender equality and a renewed commitment to implement the national action plan for women. Women from across the country are demanding a more inclusive peace process that gives women an active role in monitoring of reintegration efforts, and that security of women which coontinues to be a daily threat in public and private spaces beccomes a top priority for national and international actors in Afghanistan. Civil society organizations and networks are calling for more than just a seat at the table with reintegration efforts often targeting the worst perpetrators against women’s rights, they want to actively monitor peace and integration processes and provide feedback on what is working on the ground.
Over these past five months, with UN Women’s support, the Afghan Women’s Network (AWN) has brought women throughout the country together in preparation for Bonn, to put their priorities and concerns on the table. During the conference, gender equality advocates laid out a comprehensive set of recommendations, ranging from demanding a more transparent and rigorous recruitment process for the Afghan National Security Forces and local police involving women’s groups and women community leaders, to requesting government to prioritize the protection of women leaders, to ensuring the allocation of 25 30 percent of the Afghan Peace and Reintegration Programme budget for initiatives impacting women’s and girls’ access to quality education and health services, access to agricultural programmes, vocational training and other economic empowerment initiatives.
Afghan women called for an international community that is willing to make long-term commitments beyond 2014 to advance the situation of Afghan women and girls, by expanding and protecting their access to education, their economic security, their right to live free of violence, and to determine their roles and their future. As one of the Afghan women said: “Men and women are two wings of the same bird. If one wing is broken, the bird cannot take off and fly.”
Peace,
Mary
UN Women is the UN organization dedicated to gender equality and the empowerment of women
winnipeg@unwomencanada.org
http://winnipegchapter.unwomencanada.org
Violence against women is not solely a woman’s issue. It diminishes each and every one of us. We need to come together to end it. By coming together, by standing up against violence against women, we will come closer to peace, justice and equality. - Michelle Bachelet, Executive Director, UN Women
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