SEXISME et DROITS des FEMMES / SEXISM and WOMEN'S RIGHTS : Bulletin 2003 - Eté / Summer : N 3

 

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SEXISME et DROITS des FEMMES / SEXISM and WOMEN'S RIGHTS : Bulletin 2003 - Eté / Summer : N 3

 

1 - Mauritanie : La scolarisation des filles
2 - Tunisia : Women and girls
3 - Uganda : Women Gain Inch in Push for Land Rights
4 - Nigeria
* A letter regarding the case of Amina Lawal
* Le procès en appel d'Amina Lawal doit avoir lieu le 27 août
5 - RDC : Etre femme en temps de guerre...
6 - Afghanistan
* Afghan Teens Speak Out Against Early Marriage

* Afghan Women's Group Seeks Equal Rights
7 - India : Child Marriage Means Child Labour For Daughters
8 - Japan : For women, a struggle !
9 - Russia : Rights of women serving in Russian armed forces to be limited 
10 - U.K: New Law to Punish Mutilating Girls Abroad
11 - Scotland : Islamic School Damned by Inspectors

12 - Europe
* To ensure progress in women's representation in the European Parliament / Faire progresser la représentation des femmes au Parlement européen
* Nouvelles / News

13 - International
* The Legal Status of the Fetus - Implications for Medical Personnel
* Adolescent Girls
  
* Statistics on violence against women
* Predictors of Domestic Violence Homicide of Women
* The Gender Budget Analysts Requirements
* "Violence - Masculinity - Peace"
* Promoting a New Vision of Masculinity

14 - Livre / Book

 

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1 - Mauritanie : La scolarisation des filles

1- La chute des effectifs des filles entre le cycle primaire et le cycle secondaire

Le taux brut de scolarisation des filles passe de 83,5% dans l’enseignement du premier degré à 14% en moyenne au niveau de l’enseignement secondaire. Cette chute des effectifs est particulièrement marquée dans les quatre régions ciblées: Assaba, Brakna, Gorgol et Guidimagha. Ainsi, au Guidimagha, le taux de fréquentation de l’enseignement secondaire n’est que de 4.7 % pour les filles. Le rapport entre la première année du secondaire et la dernière année de l’enseignement fondamental pour l’ensemble des 4 régions est de 28,6 %, contre 36 % au niveau national.

2- Les taux très élevés de déperdition en cours de scolarité: 
Une estimation sur la base d’une cohorte reconstituée de 1000 filles admises en 1ère ES révèle que 574 passent en second cycle, 441 arrivent en 6ème année et seulement 73 obtiennent leur diplôme, soit un total de 927 abandons (92.7 %). 


3- L’important écart entre le taux de réussite des filles et celui des garçons: 

En 1999, le taux de réussite des garçons au baccalauréat a été de 21%, mais seulement de 9.9 % pour les filles. Pour l’ensemble des 4 régions ciblées, l’écart est encore plus important (22% et 3,7 % respectiveme
(Session 1999)

Cette situation est inacceptable compte tenu de l’importance du facteur éducatif pour l’émancipation des filles. La poursuite de la scolarité permet en effet de limiter le travail non rémunéré et les grossesses précoces, mais également d’espacer les naissances, nécessaires à la préservation de leur santé et de leurs moyens d’existence. L’éducation augmente leur capacité de gagner des revenus décents; de pouvoir participer aux décisions politiques et économiques, et, le moment propice venu, d’apprendre à leurs enfants à suivre la même voie.

L’éducation des filles est plus largement un outil efficace de développement social. C’est un placement à moyen et long terme dont le rendement est exceptionnellement élevé au profit de la famille, de la communauté et du pays. Ceci est particulièrement important en Mauritanie où l’analyse de la société fait apparaître que, même en occupant une place relativement importante au sein de la famille, la femme mauritanienne a peu d’opportunités de participer à la vie économique et politique. Le Rapport sur le Développement Humain du PNUD classe la Mauritanie au 101 ème rang sur 102 pays étudiés pour ce qui est de l’indicateur de participation des femmes (IPF). 

Les principales études sur les contraintes à la scolarisation des filles en Mauritanie montrent que les filles ont de grandes difficultés à : (i) poursuivre leurs études, (ii) se maintenir dans le système éducatif et (iii) réussir aux examens de fin de cycle, pour des raisons multiples, interactives et s’expliquant par le contexte socio-économique et socio-culturel. Plus particulièrement, il s’agit de:

  1. l’extrême pauvreté des parents et des coûts d’opportunités très élevés pour la plupart des familles. Malgré l’effort consenti par l’Etat mauritanien, le financement de l’éducation reste problématique. La quasi-totalité du budget de ce secteur est en effet consacré aux salaires et l’essentiel des frais de scolarisation incombe aux populations. L’achat de toutes les fournitures et manuels, mais également la participation à la construction et à l’entretien des bâtiments scolaires sont à la charge des parents; 
  2. la distance à parcourir entre les collèges situés dans les villes et le lieu de résidence. Dans un pays désertique où la densité de la population est de 2,4 habitants par km2, cette distance est dissuasive à la fois et pour les filles et pour les parents qui craignent pour leur sécurité;
  3. les tâches domestiques que les adolescentes doivent assumer traditionnellement, tout au long de la journée et de l’année, que ce soit dans leur famille ou chez les parents qui les accueillent en ville;
  4. les mariages et maternités précoces: une fille sur quatre est mariée dès l’âge de 12 ans, une fille sur deux dès l’âge de 14 ans et trois filles sur quatre à l’âge de 17 ans;
  5. les représentations sociales discriminatoires sur l’identité et le rôle de la femme, avec pour corollaire la dévalorisation des études des filles;
  6. les attitudes sexistes véhiculées par les contenus des programmes et des manuels scolaires renforçant les représentations traditionnelles;
  7. les comportements et commentaires des enseignants où souvent transparaissent des messages discriminatoires et désobligeants à l’égard des filles;
  8. les méthodes pédagogiques essentiellement axées sur des exposés dogmatiques, faisant appel à la mémoire plutôt qu’au raisonnement, combinées à une discipline autoritaire souvent blessante et humiliante pour la fille;
  9. le nombre réduit de femmes enseignantes au niveau de l’enseignement secondaire. En 1998/1999, les femmes ne représentaient que 12,7 % des enseignants du 1er cycle (les collèges) et 7,1 % des enseignants du 2ème cycle (les lycées).

    From : http://www.un.mr/filles/situation-edu.html (© 2000 Nations Unies en Mauritanie).

 

 

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2 - Tunisia : Women and girls 

* Consécration du principe de l'égalité juridique entre les deux sexes à travers la promulgation du Code de Statut personnel (1956)

- l'abolition de la polygamie.
- l'institution du divorce judiciaire et l'octroi aux deux conjoints du droit de demander le divorce.
- la fixation de l'âge minimum pour le mariage à 17 ans pour la jeune fille sous réserve de son consentement.
- l'attribution à la mère, en cas de décès du père, du droit de tutelle sur ses enfants mineurs.
- l'institution en matière d'héritage, du legs obligatoire en faveur des enfants de la fille en cas de décès de celle-ci avant son père.
- Contrôle démographique: la législation relative au planning familial a joué un rôle moteur, au même titre que celle relative au statut personnel, dans la libération de la femme tunisienne et l'affirmation de sa présence dans la vie active et publique.

 
 
*
 
* Education
  • School enrollment of girls at the age of 6 has reached more than 99.1 % in 2000-2001..
  • The proportion of girls in the total primary school population rose from 38.6% in 1974-75 to 47.6% during the 2000-2001 year.
  • In the secondary schools, this proportion rose from 32.4% in 1975-76 to 51.1% in 1999-2000.
  • The number of women enrolled in institutions of higher education has increased considerably during recent years. The percentage of young women in universities rose to 51.9% in 2000-2001 (compared to 25.8% in 1975).

From : http://www.tunisiaonline.com/women/women1.html


 

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3 - Uganda : Women Gain Inch in Push for Land Rights

Women Gain Inch in Push for Land Rights in Uganda

A new amendment to the 1998 Land Act in Uganda takes a small step toward women obtaining land rights. The issue is expected to remain on the national agenda, however, as candidates for president position themselves to gain the women's vote.

Roseline Ahimbisibwe

KAMPALA, Uganda (WOMENSENEWS)--"It was 1995 when my husband chased me away from my house," remembers Roseline Ahimbisibwe, a 45-year-old widow and mother of four. "I think it was stress; he had debts."

She believes that money problems drove her husband to turn abusive, have affairs, mortgage their house and sell their plot, before he died mysteriously in 1998, possibly with HIV. Unlike many, Ahimbisibwe, a primary school teacher, was able to find a new place to live when the bank took her home. These days, she boasts of small successes, like her son's plans to enroll in university next year. Yet, she remains stalled in her own plans to open a daycare center and nursery on the land that legally should belong to her.

Though there are no laws against women owning land in Uganda, the custom of male inheritance in a rural and poor society has resulted in 93 percent of women being locked out of ownership. To counter this trend and curb the widespread dispossession of widows and wives, activists for years have tried to amend Uganda's property laws so that spouses are deemed co-owners of "family land," that land on which the couple lives and depends. Despite Uganda's progressive 1995 Constitution, which values gender equity and reserves a significant number of seats in Parliament for women, despite numerous studies linking women's property rights to economic development, despite extensive coverage of the movement for women's land rights in Uganda, both in academia and in the press, and despite five years of activism, advocates for women's land rights have achieved few legislative successes.

Women, who supply 80 percent of agricultural labor in Uganda, are simply not expected to own land. When activists tried to have wives deemed co-owners of family land in 1998, opponents of the measure blocked such a clause from being incorporated into Section 40 of the Land Act, which required a spouse's written consent to sell land that provides the family both shelter and sustenance. Implementation of even this modest protection has been poor: one-third of adults are illiterate and a husband's verbal claim to the buyer that his wife agrees is often sufficient. If more proof is required, there are no safeguards to prevent a husband from supplying forged documents, or even hiring an impersonator.

Last month, Parliament passed an amendment to Section 40 of the 1998 Land Act that achieves a measured victory by broadening the definition of spousal land and preventing a spouse's objection to its sale from lapsing. However, activists' original intentions to assert a wife's co-ownership rights are still on hold.

Tradition of Male Inheritance Leaves Women Landless

While the new bill represents progress, the law will not uproot the cultural traditions that are the biggest obstacle to women gaining land ownership rights. Ahimbisibwe, a joint owner with her name on the title, shouldn't have needed special protection. Yet, like so many women, her husband's word was accepted as proof of her consent and she learned about the sale of her land too late. Now she is responsible for returning to the buyer the profits her husband spent, and after five years in court, has still been unable to recover what was never legally sold.

"Here in Uganda, always boys inherit the land," explains Ahimbisibwe, in an interview with Women's eNews. Despite her experiences, even she would will her property to her second oldest son, a dependable and high-achieving high school student. When asked whether she agrees with the tradition that would leave her two daughters dependent on finding husbands with property, she laughs, and hopes to put off deciding until they are grown.

In patriarchal societies like Uganda, the idea that wives are property hasn't entirely died out. Many husbands still pay a bride price; Ahimbisibwe's was three cows. When a man dies, his land typically goes to his male children or to his male kin, reverting back to his clan. Though illegal, property-grabbing, when a man's relatives descend upon his widow to claim the household's material possessions, is common.

"This behavior creates street children, creates women sex-workers because they have nowhere to resort to. I wish government could see this," says Loice Bwambale, a member of parliament sitting on the Select Committee that designed the amendment to Section 40.

Part of the weakness in the current law is that power dynamics within the home often make it difficult for women to assert their ownership rights.

"Sometimes you rise to your own peril. He might beat you or chase you out of the home, so it's not something women would jump to do," says Jacqueline Asiimwe-Mwesige, a lawyer and coordinator for the Uganda Women's Network, a Kampala-based organization that promotes women's use of information and communication technologies. (...)

From : http://www.womensenews.org/article.cfm/dyn/aid/1456/context/cover/





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4 - Nigeria

* A letter regarding the case of Amina Lawal


14 August 2003

A letter from BAOBAB for Women's Human Rights, Lagos, Nigeria regarding the case of Amina Lawal.

Dear friends,

Thank you for forwarding this and being concerned to check before rushing ahead. Do please circulate this response to all those you know might have received the erroneous petition (and anyone else who might be interested/concerned).

The petitions currently being circulated (one is posted below) are WRONG in fact again. Amina's appeal hearing at the Katsina State Sharia Court of Appeal had been postponed and is to be heard on August 27. Her case has not yet been heard in the Katsina State Sharia Court of Appeal. Therefore, it has not reached the Supreme Court - nor even the Federal Sharia Court of Appeal. In addition, implementation of any sentence is stayed until the final results of any appeals.

This kind of petition is damaging for Amina Lawal's defence and cases like hers. It is particularly damaging for trying to rally public opinion in her defence. As I write, we have just been in meeting in Abuja (Nigeria's capital) on Sharia Penal and Family Law in Nigeria, in which most of us defending Amina and others in similar situations (including BAOBAB, WRAPA, the Nigerian Human Rights Commission and several of the lawyers) were facing directly some of the religious right wing conservative/traditionalists. From many quarters - in this meeting and outside - the reception is extremely hostile of our message that women's and other human rights can and should be respected in sharia (has often been the case in sharia's diversity in time and space as well as in fiqh - Muslim jurisprudence), and, that Muslim laws and international human rights are not necessarily mutually incompatible.

The response of many people here (even those sympathetic to Ms. Lawal) has frequently been to ask why are people in the USA and the UK apparently so concerned over the life of one Muslim woman in Nigeria, when they are killing large numbers of Muslim men women and children regularly and are directly responsible for the horrors of war and its aftermath of infrastructure breakdown, food shortages and disease, nuclear poisoning from lack of attention to patrolling known nuclear sites, in Iraq etc etc. We try to make the point that there is a difference between the USA state and the people, but it is hard in the face of inaccurate and insensitive petitions like these issued not by the state but by individuals.

We have copied Amnesty International on this - following on our last Open Letter, Amnesty International in both the International Secretariat in London, and in the USA issued statements stating that they support the local appeal process and did not think that it was appropriate for this kind of petition at this time. Since then they have also acted to ask people not to circulate petitions like these. Stefane Mikala of Amnesty International’s International Secretariat (London) assures us that the petition below is not circulated by them.

We paste below also our Open Letter of May 2003, in case you have not seen it, as all the comments therein (with the exception of the current appeal hearing date) remain valid. In addition, for those who would like to make donations to support the defences, we have a new address as the Canadian NGO Rights and Democracy (formerly known as the International Centre for Rights and Democratic Development) has kindly agreed to handle donations to BAOBAB, in order to allay the concerns of those worried about the possibility of fraud in sending money to Nigeria.

If people want to help, at a minimum, do please get the facts right. We would appreciate it too if they would support the efforts of human rights defenders here in Nigeria, instead of making things more difficult.

Finally, we would like to thank the many, many people who responded to the original Open Letter, in support, in critique and in donations to support the work.

Best

Ayesha Imam (Board Member)
Sindi Médar-Gould (Executive Director)
BAOBAB for Women s Human Rights

From :
wluml@wluml.org
 
 


* Le procès en appel d'Amina Lawal doit avoir lieu le 27 août 2003

 

Après plusieurs renvois, le procès en appel d'Amina Lawal doit avoir lieu le 27 août 2003, dans l'État du Katsina dont elle est originaire, dans le nord du Nigéria. Amina Lawal et ses avocats devraient être présents à cette séance. Le processus judiciaire devrait suivre son cours si le quorum des juges est atteint cette fois-ci.

Amnesty International continue à recevoir des sollicitations affirmant à tort que l'exécution d'Amina Lawal est imminente ­ avant le 27 août, ou à cette date ­ et citant Amnesty International comme source de ces
informations erronées.

Aucune exécution de la sentence ne doit avoir lieu avant le 27 août ou à cette date.

Amnesty International croit savoir que le droit d'Amina Lawal de bénéficier d'une assistance juridique et d'interjeter appel sont actuellement garantis. Elle ne se trouve pas en détention et bénéficie d'un bon soutien juridique, ainsi que de l'aide d'une coalition de groupes nigérians de défense des
droits des femmes et des droits humains. Amnesty International reste en contact étroit avec ces organisations.

« Malheureusement, cette affaire a été reportée à de si nombreuses reprises que beaucoup de gens ayant agi pour que la condamnation d'Amina Lawal soit annulée n'arrivent pas à comprendre pourquoi une femme et son enfant peuvent être soumis à une pareille épreuve. Cette lenteur judiciaire devient manifestement un déni de justice », a déclaré l'organisation.

Contexte

En mars 2002 Amina Lawal, musulmane, a été reconnue coupable par un tribunal d'avoir porté un enfant hors mariage. Selon le « Code pénal islamique », qui est à présent appliqué dans plusieurs États du nord du Nigéria, cette accusation était suffisante pour la reconnaître coupable du crime d'adultère et la convoquer devant un tribunal islamique, afin qu'elle réponde d'un «crime » passible de la mort par lapidation, selon le nouveau « Code pénal islamique » introduit au Nigéria en 1999.

News Press 14/08/2003 10:02

 

 

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5 - RDC : Etre femme en temps de guerre...

Histoire de Passy

 

Les amies l’appelaient Passy. À 18 ans, elle a vaincu. Le refus de subir violence sexuelle, même si cela signifie être tuée, est l’extrême résistance de la dignité du petit face à la violence du fort. Passy a dit au prix de sa vie le « non » que toutes les femmes violées crient dans le silence. Elle a été leur porte-parole. Par son pardon, elle a vaincu le manque d’humanité de celui qui l’a  tuée.

Pascasie Munguhashire était née dans la zone de Ngweshe en 1985, de Claude Murahanyi et de Vénantie M’Centwali, quatrième enfant d’une nombreuse famille. (...)
Un après-midi, après la récollection, en rentrant chez elle a Bukavu, où ses parents s’étaient transférés à cause de la guerre, Pascasie exprima le désir de retourner à Mugogo pour rendre visite à la tante qui était restée au village.
Elle aurait dû voyager avec sa sœur Bora et leur frère aîné, mais Pascasie avait dit à Bora : « Ne viens pas à Mogogo, tu serais violée par les soldats ». Bora lui répondit : « Toi aussi, tu es une fille : ne pourrais-tu pas, toi aussi, être violée par les militaires ?». Pascasie répondit : « Je suis en paix avec tout le monde; je suis sure que je ne serai pas violée ».
Pascasie et son frère aîné commencent leur voyage. Arrivés à Ciriri, ils voient qu’il y a des affrontements. En fuyant, ils se perdent de vue. Pascasie arrive tout seule à Mugogo ; les paysans se sont enfuis en forêt ; seulement quelques-uns commencent à retourner au village.
Pascasie rencontre quatre amies à elle, qui l’accompagnent chez elle. À la maison elle ne trouve qu’un peu de farine de manioc ; alors elle dit à ses copines : « Je vais chercher un peu de légumes pour préparer à manger pour mon frère et pour les autres qui arriveront dans peu ».
Entre-temps, les soldats du RCD font tout le temps le tour du village. Lorsque Pascasie rentre à la maison, tout d’un coup, derrière elle arrivent les soldats aussi. Ils la saisissent, avec l’intention de la violer devant ses copines. Pascasie résiste de toutes ses forces.
Les soldats, pour l’intimider, la blessent deux fois aux mains avec un coutelas, (...). L’un d’eux tire sur Pascasie, deux balles qui la transpercent. Ses quatre amies ne réussissent pas à se défendre et sont violées.
Après cela, Pascasie continue à préparer les légumes, comme si rien ne s’était passé ; le sang commence à sortir de sa poitrine et coule tout au long du corps. Une de ses sœurs arrive et, surprise, lui demande : « Pourquoi est-tu toute seule ici, où tant de soldats passent ? ». Pascasie lui répond : « Regarde ce qu’ils m’ont fait, parce que j’ai refusé ». En sentant augmenter la douleur, Pascasie (...)dit à sa sœur : “Demande pour moi pardon à papa, car je suis venue ici sans sa permission. (...) ».

C’était mardi 8 avril 2003. Pascasie n’avait que 18 ans.

From: Mulegwa




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6 - Afghanistan

* Afghan Teens Speak Out Against Early Marriage

 KABUL—“If my parents tried to force me to marry, I would refuse,” declared Zohal, 16, as her fellow students nodded in agreement. The Afghan teenagers had just heard government leaders say that early marriage closes girls’ educational prospects and threatens their health, in a forum marking World Population Day.

Such outspokenness is rare in a country where conservative traditions hold firm, daughters bring a dowry and early pregnancy contributes to soaring rates of maternal mortality.

Zohal and her classmates belong to a small group of Afghan girls who attend secondary school. While girls’ schools were closed for five years by the former Taliban regime, she was studying in Pakistan. Her family returned to Afghanistan last year.

The female students from Al Fatah High School were in the audience as senior officials and a representative of UNFPA, the United Nations Population Fund, spoke on this year’s World Population Day theme, the needs of over 1 billion adolescents worldwide for information and services to ensure their reproductive health and rights. (...)

Most Afghan women start childbearing early and have many children, a dangerous situation given the country’s appalling lack of health services. “The right size for a family is two children, one boy and one girl,” Muzhgan opined. Another classmate suggested that two boys and two girls were ideal. “In my opinion,” Zohal said, “parents need only one child, a girl, like my family has.”

(11 July 2003)
From :
http://www.unfpa.org/news/news.cfm?ID=346

 


* Afghan Women's Group Seeks Equal Rights

Afghan Women's Group Seeks Equal Rights
By TODD PITMAN
.c The Associated Press

KABUL, Afghanistan (AP) - In a country where girls were banned from attending school, an Afghan women's group pressed Sunday to enshrine equal rights with men in Afghanistan's new constitution.

Negar, as the group is known, collected 100,000 signatures on its ``Declaration of the Essential Rights of Afghan Women,'' and presented it Sunday to a government commission crafting the constitution, due to be finalized in October.

The 35-member commission has been reviewing a secret draft since April.

``On the basis of these signatures, Negar demands that this equality be respected and reflected in the new constitution,'' the organization said in a statement.

Negar formed with international assistance during the reign of the Taliban, the strict Muslim regime that banned most women from working and prohibited girls from attending school or moving about freely without a male relative.

A U.S.-led coalition ousted the Taliban regime in late 2001 for providing sanctuary to Osama bin Laden and his al-Qaida terrorist network.

Negar's declaration was written by Afghan women in exile in Dushanbe, Tajikistan, in 2000.

The document demands the elimination of gender-based discrimination and segregation, the right to move about independently and to choose whether to wear a burqa, the head-to-toe garment required for women under some strict interpretations of Islam.

``Negar believes that without equal citizenship for both men and women, Afghanistan cannot achieve its legitimacy as an independent, sovereign and self-ruling state of the world,'' the group said in the statement.

In recent weeks, members of the commission have fanned out across the country to solicit public views for the final draft of the constitution, which will be considered at a loya jirga, or grand council, in October.

President Hamid Karzai's administration now relies on an amended version of a 1964 constitution drafted under former King Mohammad Zaher Shah.         

08/03/03 15:14 EDT. Copyright 2003 The Associated Press. The information contained in the AP news report may not be published, broadcast, rewritten or otherwise distributed without the prior written authority of The Associated Press.   

From : Constance Borde



 
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7 - India : Child Marriage Means Child Labour For Daughters
 
 
     
Child Marriage Means Child Labour For Daughters  
By Sudha Ramachandran 
 
 
BANGALORE, INDIA (PANOS) – Hindus across India recently celebrated Akha Teej, the most auspicious day for marriage. Many thousands of couples were joined in matrimony during communal ceremonies.

Parents and relatives rejoiced, communities celebrated – and human rights campaigners despaired.

In most of the unions the bride and groom are children, even babes-in-arms, lifted up by family members to touch the marriage arch (Toran) and perform – without comprehension or consent – the most important ceremony of their lives. Child marriage has been illegal in India for 73 years. (...)

According to the UN Children’s Fund, millions of children are forced into early marriage due to poverty, tradition and parental desire to protect daughters from unwanted sexual advances. Most commonly practised in South Asia and sub-Saharan Africa, child marriage denies a woman the right to freely choose her partner, and often triggers further human rights violations including the end of her formal education.

The Akha Teej festivities began just five days after the UN deliberations concluded, despite a week-long campaign by India’s National Commission for Women to enforce the country’s 1929 Child Marriage Restraint Act. The law currently prohibits marriage of girls below 18 years and of boys below 21 years of age.

Although the age of marriage for women – particularly in urban areas – is rising to approximately 19 years of age, according to the 1998-99 National Family Health Survey one-third of all adolescent girls are married by the age of 15. (...)

In the relatively wealthy southern state of Karnataka, child marriage is the norm among members of the Gowli community. In October 2001, 12 child couples were married in a mass wedding ceremony, among them five year-old Bammubai, who attends pre-primary school. When asked if she knows what marriage means, she points to her mangalsutra (a chain worn around the neck that signifies marriage). (...) 

Dr Sunil Mehra of the Delhi-based non-governmental organisation Health Institute for Mother and Child, did not mince words when he spoke to a packed meeting on child marriage at the Children’s Summit.

For girls, adolescent marriage is “child labour in its worse form”, Mehra said bluntly.
While tradition is often cited as the reason, “it is poverty that compels people to go for an early marriage of their children,” according to Manoj Satpathy of the Manab Seba Parishad, an NGO working in the eastern state of Orissa.

Parents of a girl are often eager to relieve themselves of the burden of feeding one more mouth. There is also the lure of money. The Gowli tribals practise bride price. Getting a girl married early could bring in money for a family, however small the amount.

Many parents choose early marriage for altruistic motives. “In urban slums, girls are married early to protect them from unwanted sexual advances,” says Dr Sandhya, a doctor at the Sultanpalya Health Centre in Bangalore.

The reality is sex within marriage can also be dangerous for vulnerable girls who may endure “unequal, potentially coercive, uninformed and [unhealthy] sexual relations with a relative stranger,” according to researcher Judith Bruce, of the New York-based Population Council. (...)

Family pressure on young brides to prove their fertility is intense, and they lack bargaining power with partners over sexual relations and contraception. Young brides who fail to immediately conceive are deemed barren – and may be cast out of the marital home. (...)

Married adolescent girls – often suffering from severe anaemia and malnutrition – are at heightened risk during pregnancy and childbirth. According to the UN, maternal mortality is 25 times higher for girls under 15, and two times higher for 15 to 19 year olds.

In a bid to halt child marriage, government and NGOs are uniting to strengthen the Child Marriage Restraint Act – which clearly has failed to stop the practice. The present Act is notoriously difficult to enforce (...)

Now India’s National Commission for Women has proposed amendments to the Act to include stringent punishment, compulsory registration of all marriages, the appointment of child marriage prevention officers in each state and make it obligatory upon anyone attending a child marriage to prevent or report it to authorities. (...)

“[Child] marriage can’t be handled in isolation,” Mehra agrees. “The issues are so deep-rooted there will be no [single] answer.”

From :
markc@panoslondon.org.uk
http://www.panos.org.uk/newsfeatures/featuredetails.asp?id=1002

 

 
 
 
 
 





 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
 
***
 
 
8 - Japan : For women, a struggle !

(...) But it often seems that the Japanese would rather let the economy stagnate than send their women up the corporate ladder. Resistance to expanding women's professional roles remains tremendously high in a nation where the economic status of women trails far behind other advanced economies. "Japan is still a developing country in terms of gender equality," Mariko Bando, an aide to Prime Minister Junichiro Koizumi, recently told reporters. This year the World Economic Forum ranked Japan 69th in a list of 75 nations in empowering its women.
.
While 40 percent of Japanese women work, a figure that reflects their rapid recent entry into the job market, only about 9 percent of the managerial positions are held by women, compared with about 45 percent in the United States. Women's wages, meanwhile, are about 65 percent those of their male counterparts - one of the largest gaps in the industrial world.
.
Japanese labor economists and others say it is no wonder, then, that Japan, a country which looked liked a world beater 20 years ago, is today struggling to compete economically. With women sidelined from the career track, Japan is in effect fighting with one hand tied behind its back.
.
"Japan has gone as far as it can go with a social model that consists of men filling all of the economic, management and political roles," said Eiko Shinotsuka, assistant dean of Ochanomizu University, and the first woman to serve on the board of the Bank of Japan.
.
"People have spoken of the dawn of a women's age here before, but that was always in relatively good times, economically, and the country was able to avoid social change," she said. "We've never had such a long economic crisis as this one, though, and people are beginning to recognize that the place of women in our society is an important factor."
.
By tradition, Japanese companies hire men almost exclusively to fill career positions, reserving shorter-term, mostly clerical and tea-serving work for women, who are widely known in such jobs here as office ladies, or simply "OL's."
.
Suzuki, who went into business for herself, is the exception. These days, the impeccably groomed 32-year-old, who wears crisp business suits and speaks at a rapid and confidence-oozing clip, is the proud owner of her own company, a short-term office suite rental business in one of Tokyo's smartest quarters.
.
"I am the only professional out of all of my girlhood friends," she said. "The rest are housewives or regular office ladies, and they all say that what has happened to me is unbelievable."
.
Whatever a woman's qualifications, breaking into the career track requires overcoming the biases that are entrenched in this society, not least the feeling among managers that childbearing is an insupportable disruption.
.
This is so even though the country faces a steep population decline and keeping women sidelined has had economic costs of its own. Women's relative lack of economic participation may shave 0.6 percent off annual growth, according to a study presented to the Labor Ministry last year. Meanwhile, at companies where women make up 40 to 50 percent of the work force, average profits are double those where women account for 10 percent of the staff or less, the Ministry of Economy said last month. A recent issue of the magazine Women nonetheless recounted stories of women who said they had been illegally dismissed from their jobs because of pregnancy or had sought abortions for fear of being dismissed.
.
"I reported to my boss that I was pregnant and would like to take off for a medical check," Masumi Honda, a 33-year-old mother was quoted as saying. "When I came home from the hospital, I was shocked that he had just left a message, saying that I needn't bother coming to work anymore." Other women say that the intense competitive pressure in the workplace can lead to resentment, even in the most progressive of companies, against mothers who do avail themselves of child care leave or flexible working hours.
.
One woman, who abandoned a career in marketing after similar experiences in two companies, recounted taking leave for three days to look after her sick child. "After that, I was not included in new projects," said the woman, who did not want to be identified, "and after that I felt they saw me as an unreliable person."
.
"There are so many women at the company who remain single," she added, "and they work so hard, I don't think they realize what it is like to raise children. There are many men like this, too, and I finally decided that if I work in a company, I must understand the company's spirit, which means I couldn't feel comfortable taking maternal benefits."
.
The growing sense of urgency in official circles around these issues is driven largely by the projections of a population decline that could cause huge labor shortages over the next half century and possibly even economic collapse. So far, however, government efforts to expand women's place in the economy have been modest and halting.
.
An advisory panel appointed by the prime minister recently recommended that both public and private sectors set a target of at least 30 percent of managerial positions to be filled by women by 2020. These days, too, there is growing talk of affirmative action in Japan.
.
But changing mind-sets will be difficult. Earlier this year, a former prime minister, Yoshiro Mori, a member of a government commission charged with finding solutions to the decline of population numbers, was widely quoted as saying the main reason for Japan's falling birthrate was the overeducation of its women.
.
Koizumi's top aide, Yasuo Fukuda, was recently quoted saying that women who get raped often deserved it, while a legislator from the governing party said, approvingly, that the men who carry out such acts are "virile" and "good specimens." The latter comment came at a seminar about the country's falling birthrate.
.
While senior politicians bemoan too much education as the cause of Japan's population problems, women unsurprisingly cite other reasons for the difficulty of having children while also playing a bigger role in the country's economic life. Foremost is a lack of day care, which for many women forces stark choices between motherhood and career. There are also the working hours of many offices, which extend long into the evening, and sometimes involve all-but-obligatory social drinking after work.
.
Haruko Takachi, a 37-year-old postal manager, is luckier than most. Her child was accepted into a 20-place nursery. "I work until 8 in the evening, but there are plenty of times when I work much later," she said. "That's just the social reality in Japan. There are some other women in my milieu, but most of them have just one child, and don't plan for more."
.
Yuko Suzuki, who founded her own business, has been married for several years, and is still without a child. For her, day care is just a small piece of what is needed in Japan. Both men and women, she says, must rethink gender roles - an idea that she hesitantly concludes makes her a feminist.
.
"Men are really intimidated by professional women in Japan," she said. "But this is still a society where even when it looks like a woman has some authority, the men usually manage to stay on top."
 
Howard W. French/NYT The New York Times

 

 
9 - Russia : Rights of women serving in Russian armed forces to be limited 

MOSCOW. July 23 - The Russian Defense Ministry believes that laws partially limiting the rights of women serving in the Russian armed forces should be passed, a source in the Defense Ministry told Interfax.

"Women concluding their first contract with the army must not have children. They must also commit themselves not to have children during the period covered by the contract," he said.

"Moreover, the rights and liberties of women with children under three years of age, applied to women serving in the armed forces, must be reconsidered and made applicable to women serving in the army who have children aged under 18 months."

He said the Defense Ministry has studied the experience of countries with contract military service, including the U.S., France and Britain.

From : http://www.interfax.ru/e/B/0/28.html?menu=1&id_issue=5650061




***




10 - U.K: New Law to Punish Mutilating Girls Abroad

Parents who take their daughters abroad to have their genitals mutilated could face up to 14 years in prison if a new law gets passed. Home Secretary David Blunkett has given his backing to a private members bill to make it illegal for girls to be “taken on holiday” in order to have their genitals cut. Penalties would be increased from 5 years to 14 years.
FGM is practised in
Britain among Somali, Ethiopian, Eritrian, Yemeni, Malaysian and Indonesian communities. It is more common among Muslims, although not exclusively an Islamic practice. It is believed some 74,000 first generation African immigrant women in Britain
have undergone FGM, and that up to 7,000 girls under 16 are at risk of being subjected to it in this country. 
                                                        
FGM is usually performed on girls between the ages of 4 and 13, but newborn babies and young women before marriage or pregnancy can also be targeted. Reasons given for carrying it out include: religious demands, custom and tradition, family honour, hygiene and “prevention of promiscuity”.
 
A report from Soroptimists, a worldwide group of professionals that advocates for the rights of women in the world, says that 120 million women have been mutilated in this way. It says this figure rises by 1 million each year.
 "Women in the Middle East" Bulletin No 15 August 03
 
From :
azam_kamguian@yahoo.com <azam_kamguian@yahoo.com>




***



11 - Scotland : Islamic School Damned by Inspectors

School inspectors have published a damning report on one of
Scotland’s two independent Islamic schools. They said the education provided for secondary pupils and boarders at Iqra Academy, in Glasgow
, is unsatisfactory and that the welfare of the school’s students was not being safeguarded.
 
The report reveals that the girls in the school are receiving a significantly inferior education, are being bullied and don’t like the time they spend in the school. Half teaching time is spent on “Islamic studies” and the rest on a very narrow curriculum restricted to maths, English and science – although none of them were satisfactorily taught. The Scottish Executive has served notice, giving the academy six months to implement the report’s recommendations, or face possible closure.
 
Among other problems, the inspectors said the school “was not promoting a healthy lifestyle”, with poor exercise provision and a lack of fresh fruit and vegetables for boarders. In a statement, school officials said: “We are seriously concerned about the issues raised and we will immediately implement points of actions outlined in the report.”  
Newsline, The National Secular Society www.secularism.org.uk

"Women in the Middle East" Bulletin No 15 August 03 

From :
azam_kamguian@yahoo.com <azam_kamguian@yahoo.com>




***




12 - Europe

* To ensure progress in women's representation in the European Parliament / Faire progresser la représentation des femmes au Parlement européen

Dear members and friends of EWL,

(...) As national political parties are making decisions on their candidates' lists now, action is  needed quickly in order to ensure progress in women's representation in the European Parliament.

The EWL lobbying kit comprises:
- an argumentary about parity democracy;
- some  facts and figures about women in political decision-making
- a model lobbying letter and a questionnaire to be sent to national political parties.

Unfortunately, we could not provide you with a list of addresses of political parties for each country, but you will find links to the national parties through the websites of the main current political groups in the EP listed hereunder:
http://www.epp-ed.org/15members/home/en/externalnews.asp
http://www.socialistgroup.org/gpes/servlet/Main/Html~2?_wcs=true&r=Q10&lg=en#fr
http://eld.europarl.eu.int/content/default.asp?pageid=34
http://www.greens-efa.org/en/
http://www.europarl.eu.int/gue/tree/deleg/en/natdeleg.htm

We hope that this kit will be helpful for you work at national level.

Should you have any question please do not hesitate to contact us.

With kind regards,

Cécile Gréboval
EWL Policy Coordinator

**********************************************

Chèr-e-s membres et ami-e-s du LEF,

(...) Comme les partis piolitiques nationaux sont en train de prendre les décisions relatives à leurs listes de candidat-e-s en ce moment, il est nécessaire d'agir rapidement afin de faire progresser la représentation des femmes au Parlement européen.

Le kit de lobbying du LEF comprend:
- un argumentaire sur la démocratie paritaire;
- une fiche d'information sur les femmes dans la prise de décision politique;
- un modèle de lettre de lobbying et un questionnaire à envoer aux partis politiques nationaux.

Il ne nous a malheureusement pas été possible de vous fournir une liste d'adresses des partis politiques pour chaque pays, mais vous trouverez des liens vers les partis nationaux par le biais des sites web des principaux groupes politiques actuels au PE:
http://www.epp-ed.org/15members/home/en/externalnews.asp
http://www.socialistgroup.org/gpes/servlet/Main/Html~2?_wcs=true&r=Q10&lg=en#fr
http://eld.europarl.eu.int/content/default.asp?pageid=34
http://www.greens-efa.org/en/
http://www.europarl.eu.int/gue/tree/deleg/en/natdeleg.htm

Nous espérons que ce kit sera utile pour votre  travail au niveau national.

N'hésitez  pas à nous contacter si vous avez des questions.

Bien à vous,

Cécile Gréboval
Coordinatrice des Politiques du LEF
greboval@womenlobby.org / http://www.womenlobby.org

 


* Nouvelles / News

Rapport sur la transposition de la directive “congé parental”- La Commission Européenne a approuvé le rapport sur la transposition de la directive 96/34/CE du 3 juin 1996 concernant le congé parental. Ce rapport se base sur les informations données par les Etats membres quant aux dispositions prises au niveau national pour transposer la directive. Le rapport fait état de la situation au 02.11.2002. Lire le texte complet :

http://www.europa.eu.int/comm/employment_social/equ_opp/documents/com2003358_en.pdf

 

*

 

REPORT ON THE TRANSPOSITION OF THE PARENTAL LEAVE DIRECTIVE - The European Commission has approved the report on the transposition of the parental leave directive 96/34/EC of 3 June 1996. The Commission report is based on information from the Member States on national provisions for the transposition of the directive. The report reflects the situation as of 02.11.2002. Full report: http://www.europa.eu.int/comm/employment_social/equ_opp/documents/com2003358_en.pdf

 

 

 

*************

 

 

 

Les syndicats danois condamnent la FREQUENTATION DES prostituEES- Début juillet, la Confédération danoise des syndicats (LO) a affirmé que ses employés et ses représentants élus n’étaient plus autorisés à fréquenter les prostitué(e)s lors de leurs voyages à l’étranger dans le cadre de leur travail. « Nous voulons envoyer un message clair qui montre que LO ne contribue en aucun cas à l’oppression d’êtres humains dans d’autres pays, et nous considérons que la prostitution est une forme d’oppression de la femme” a déclaré la Vice-Présidente de LO Tine Aurvig-Huggenberger dans la newsletter de l’organisation. Lire l’article: http://www.news24.com/News24/World/News/0,,2-10-1462_1380617,00.html, informations: www.lo.dk

 

*

 

Danish Unions ban the use of prostituted women- At the beginning of July, Denmark’s Confederation of Trade Unions (LO) told its employees and elected leaders that they were no longer allowed to visit prostitutes when they travel abroad on business. "We want to send a clear signal that LO does not in any way want to contribute to the oppression of other human beings in other countries, and we consider prostitution to be an oppression of women," LO deputy chairperson Tine Aurvig-Huggenberger said in the organisation's newsletter. Full article: http://www.news24.com/News24/World/News/0,,2-10-1462_1380617,00.html, for more information: www.lo.dk

 

 

***********

 

 

  

Le groupe de travail finlandais contre la traite des etres humains préconise la criminalisation DE l’achat de services sexuels- Un groupe de travail mis sur pieds par le Ministère de la Justice en Finlande préconise de criminaliser l’achat ainsi que la commercialisation de services sexuels. En outre, le groupe de travail propose d’inclure dans une nouvelle loi des dispositions concernant le proxénétisme aggravé, la traite des personnes, voire la traite aggravée. La première partie du rapport a été présentée au Ministère de la Justice. L’objectif des amendements proposés est d’améliorer la prévention en matière de traite des personnes, de proxénétisme et de prostitution. http://www.om.fi

*

FINNISH WORKING GROUP AGAINST TRAFFICKING IN HUMAN BEINGS PROPOSE TO CRIMINALISE BUYING OF SEXUAL SERVICES - A working group set up by the Finnish Ministry of Justice proposes criminalisation of the buying of sexual services, marketing of sexual services would also be punishable. Furthermore, new provisions on aggravated pimping, trafficking in persons and aggravated trafficking in persons would be included in the law. The working group has submitted the first part of its Report to the Minister of Justice. The purpose of the proposed amendments is to improve the opportunities to prevent trafficking in persons, as well as pimping and prostitution. http://www.om.fi

From : European Women's Lobby ~ EWL - LEF ~ http://www.womenlobby.org

 


***
 
 
 
 
13 - International

* The Legal Status of the Fetus - Implications for Medical Personnel

The Legal Status of the Fetus: Implications for Medical Personnel

Article Authors: Erica Smock, J.D., Priscilla Smith, J.D., Bebe J. Anderson, J.D., attorneys with The Center for Reproductive Rights, New York, NY.

Physician's treatment of pregnant women is necessarily influenced by the legal status accorded to the fetus. To the extent that a fetus is considered a "person" under the law, it may have legal rights that may be used to restrict the mother's rights. Recently, anti-choice efforts to elevate the fetus's legal status have resulted in new laws and policies designed to protect the fetus at the expense of maternal health.

Historically, a fetus was not recognized as a legal entity separate from the pregnant woman. Indeed, abortion was generally not illegal until the latter half of the 19th century, when many states enacted laws criminalizing the procedure. Since its 1973 decision in Roe v. Wade, striking down Texas's criminal abortion laws and holding that a fetus is not a "person" with Fourteenth Amendment rights, 1the United States Supreme Court has consistently ruled that the woman's right to health and life outweighs the state's interest in potential life, even after viability.2

In recent years, however, there have been numerous attempts to elevate the status of the fetus. For example, legislatures are increasingly considering bills that afford protections for the fetus, fueling the potential for a conflict between mother and fetus. One legislative trend is the enactment of "fetal homicide" laws, which create a separate crime penalizing actions taken against a woman that result in the death of, or harm to, her fetus. These laws treat the fetus as an individual being, separate from the woman. Over twenty states currently have such laws and other states are actively considering similar legislation. Some of the proposed bills are especially troubling in that they do not contain exceptions for the woman or her doctor (thereby posing potential criminal sanction for measures taken as a course of treatment, such as radiation treatment for cancer or antibiotics for infection) or for abortion (again creating possible liability on the part of the doctor). A federal version, known as the "Unborn Victims of Violence Act" (UVVA), which does contain exceptions for the woman, her doctor, and abortion, has been proposed and has passed the House of Representatives.3

Efforts to elevate fetuses' status have also occurred at the administrative level. For example, the Bush administration recently adopted regulations that allow states to classify a fertilized egg as an "unborn child," eligible for coverage under the State Children's Health Insurance Program, rather than allowing coverage of pregnant women under the program.4 This approach could be detrimental to pregnant women's health: for example, any medical treatments that do not directly benefit the fetus are not covered, post-partum care is excluded, and there is a potential for serious conflicts over health care decision making if the needs of the fetus and pregnant woman diverge.

The legal status of fetuses has also been at issue in the courts, in a variety of contexts with mixed results. For example, in Texas and Kansas, fetuses have been found to be "patients" to whom the physician owes a duty of care under tort law.5 However, courts have almost unanimously rejected attempts to elevate the status of the fetus over that of the pregnant woman. For example, efforts to prosecute women for engaging in self-destructive behavior that poses a risk of harm to the fetus have been rejected by courts in all but one state. These courts have recognized that the fetus is not a person and that homicide and child abuse statutes never were intended to apply to a pregnant woman's behavior.6

In a similar context, the U.S. Supreme Court held that, in the absence of informed consent, a hospital's policy of drug testing a targeted group of pregnant women and reporting positive test results to law enforcement was an unconstitutional search and would violate the patients' constitutional rights, guaranteed by the Fourth Amendment, to be free from unreasonable search and seizure.7 The Court reversed the lower court's holding that the hospital was under no duty to obtain a warrant or consent for the drug testing because the policy's alleged purpose was to promote fetal health. In describing the physician's duty to the patient, the Court recognized both the pregnant woman's expectation of privacy and confidentiality in the physician-patient relationship and the resulting increased duty on the physician in that context to "make sure that the patients are fully informed about their constitutional rights, as standards of knowing waiver require."8 On remand, the lower court held that the hospital's use of general consent forms was insufficient to establish the required informed consent.9 Thus, law and medical ethics10 require that any physician who conducts drug tests on a patient must insure that the patient is fully informed of all the legal consequences of the drug test. The physician must therefore educate him or herself about the ramifications of a positive drug test, which could include mandatory reporting to a social services agency, with serious consequences for the patient and/or her children.

Attempts to grant greater legal status to the fetus -- most evident in the legislative arena -- threaten pregnant women's fundamental rights and, in particular, women's right of reproductive choice. Treating the fetus as a legal entity separate from the pregnant woman creates the potential for an adversarial relationship between the woman's health needs and those of her developing fetus and further confuses the issues of the health care provider's duty to his or her "patient," including the duty to obtain informed consent. Legislatures and medical practitioners should keep maternal health as their primary focus when addressing issues involving pregnant women.

1. Roe v. Wade, 410 U.S. 113 (1973).
2. See, e.g., Stenberg v. Carhart, 530 U.S. 914 (2000) (restrictions on abortion must include an exception for situations in which the woman's life or health is endangered).
3. H.R. 503/ S. 480. This bill died in the 107th Congress; however, a similar bill has been introduced in the 108th Congress.
4. 67 FR 61956-01 (Oct. 2, 2002).
5. See Nold v. Binyon, 31 P.3d 274 (Kan. 2001) (deciding that physician has doctor-patient relationship both with pregnant woman and with fetus she intends to carry to term); Brown v. Shwarts, 968 S.W.2d 331 (Tex. 1998) (holding that in utero fetus is doctor's patient for purposes of Texas Medical Liability Act).
6. See, e.g., State v. Ashley, 701 So. 2d 338 (Fla. 1997); but see Whitner v. South Carolina, 492 S.E.2d 777 (S.C. 1997).
7. Ferguson v. City of Charleston, 532 U.S. 67 (2001).
8. Ferguson, 532 U.S. at 85.
9. Ferguson v. City of Charleston, 2002 WL 31319506 (4th Cir. Oct. 17, 2002).
10. See, e.g., Lawrence J. Nelson & Mary Faith Marshall, Ethical and Legal Analyses of Three Coercive Policies Aimed at Substance Abuse by Pregnant Women (1998).

 


* Adolescent Girls  
 
There are 1.5 billion adolescents in the world today. 14 million children are born world wide each year to adolescent girls. Sexually transmitted diseases, including HIV/AIDS, threaten the health and survival of young women and affect the health of their newborns. Girls have limited access to transportation and meager financial resources and face services that are geared to adult women. These factors contribute to unwanted pregnancies, unsafe abortions, and the spread of sexually transmitted diseases. Girls continue to be disproportionately disadvantaged in their access to education. Girls' living arrangements, domestic roles and responsibilities, social and physical mobility and work are determinants of their well being, their status and their ability to set the terms of sexual relations and childbearing. Extensive research has shown that improvements in the lives of adolescent girls translate into improvements in their health as well as that of their children, reductions in fertility and high returns to overall economic productivity.

The United Nations Foundation’s Women and Population Program supports United Nations efforts to increase socio-economic opportunities for adolescent girls and women while increasing access to and improving the quality of reproductive health and family planning services. The UN Foundation focuses the majority of its resources within the Women and Population Program on adolescent girls, using multifaceted approaches that address their health and human rights. These approaches include: a concentration on livelihood skills; education; youth development; life skills and participation; economic access and empowerment; and reproductive health services and information.

From : http://www.unfoundation.org/programs/women_pop/unf_priorities.htm


* Statistics on violence against women

According to the statistics published by the United Nations Department of Public Information gender-based violence is a very serious problem.
*Among women aged 15-44 worldwide, gender-based violence accounts for more death and ill health than cancer, traffic injuries and malaria put together.
* Each year 2 million girls between the ages of 5 and 15 are introduced into the commercial sex market
* Approximately 60 million women, mostly in Asia, are "missing"-killed by infanticide, selective abortion, deliberate under-nutrition or lack of access to health care.
* Based on recent studies, more than 130 million girls and women, mostly in Africa, have undergone female mutilation
and an estimated 2 million girls are at risk for undergoing the procedure each year.
* Between 20,000 and 50,000 women and girls were raped in Bosnia-Herzegovina during the war in the Balkans and more than 15,000 women and girls were raped in one year in Rwanda.
* In Canada the cost of Domestic violence amounts to $1.6 billion per year, including medical care and lost productivity.
* In 9 Latin American countries, a rapist who marries his victim stays out of jail.
* Studies in the Sub-Saharan Africa indicate that adolescent girls are five to six times more likely to be HIV positive than are boys of the same age, since girls are mostly infected by older men.
* A 1998 study in North America found that 1 out of every 6 women has experienced an attempted or completed rape.
Of these women, 22 per cent were under 12 years old and 32 per cent were aged 12-17 at the time of the crime.
* Recent studies suggest that one-third of women and girls living in the European Union are subjected to male violence.
 
From : United Nations Department of Public Information

 


* Predictors of Domestic Violence Homicide of Women

A batterer's unemployment, access to guns and threats of deadly violence are the strongest predictors of female homicide in abusive relationships, according to a study in this month's issue of the American Journal of Public Health (July 2003, Vol. 93, No. 7). Risk Factors for Femicide in Abusive Relationships: Results From a Multisite Case Control Study finds that a combination of factors, rather than one single factor, increases the likelihood of intimate partner homicide involving an abusive man who kills his female partner.

Study researchers interviewed family members and other acquaintances of 220 female victims of intimate partner homicide from eleven cities across the country, as well as a control group of 343 women who reported being the victims of physical abuse in the past two years. The researchers – all carefully chosen for their close collaborations with domestic violence advocates as well as knowledge of domestic violence and interview skills – asked questions about the victim and the perpetrator, characteristics of their relationship and details about the abuse including type, frequency and severity of violence.

"In the United States, women are killed by intimate partners more often than by any other type of perpetrator, with the majority of these murders involving prior physical abuse," said Risk Factors for Femicide's lead author, Jacquelyn Campbell, Ph.D., R.N., Anna D. Wolf Endowed Professor at The Johns Hopkins University School of Nursing and Family Violence Prevention Fund board member. "Determining key risk factors, over and above a history of domestic violence, that contribute to the abuse that escalates to murder will help us identify and intervene with battered women who are most at risk."

Risk Factors for Femicide was supported by funding from the National Institute on Alcohol Abuse and Alcoholism, the National Institute on Drug Abuse, the National Institute of Mental Health, the National Institutes on Aging, the Centers for Disease Control and Prevention, and the National Institute of Justice.

Predictors of Intimate Partner Homicide

The "strongest" contextual risk factor for intimate partner homicide is an abuser's lack of employment, finds Risk Factors for Femicide. In fact, unemployment increased the risk of intimate partner homicide fourfold. The study notes that instances in which the abuser had a college education, compared with a high school education, "were protective against femicide."

Other factors that can help predict homicide are an abuser's access to firearms and use of illicit drugs. Access to firearms increased the risk of intimate partner homicide more than five times more than in instances where there were no weapons, according to Risk Factors for Femicide. The findings also "suggest" that abusers who possess guns "tend to inflict the most severe abuse." Illicit drug use also was "strongly associated" with intimate partner homicide, although the abuser's use of alcohol was not, finds the report. In addition, neither a victim's alcohol abuse nor drug use "was independently associated with her risk of being killed."

Risk Factors for Femicide also explores relationship variables that can increase a woman's risk of becoming a victim of intimate partner homicide. Never having lived with an abusive partner "significantly lowered" a woman's risk of becoming a homicide victim, according to the report. Separating from an abusive partner after having lived with him, leaving the home she shares with an abusive partner or asking her abusive partner to leave the home they share were all factors that put a woman at "higher risk" of becoming a victim of homicide. Having a child in living in the home who was not the abusive partner's biological child also contributed to intimate partner homicide – more than doubling the risk, according the Risk Factors for Femicide.

An abuser's behavior also is a factor is predicting homicide. The risk of homicide "was increased nine-fold by the combination of a highly controlling abuser and the couple's separation after living together," finds Risk Factors for Femicide. An abuser's threats with a weapon or threats to kill his victim also "were associated with substantially higher risks" for her murder. But stalking and threats to harm children or other family members were not "independently associated with" homicide. The study also found that an abuser's previous arrest for domestic violence "actually decreased the risk for femicide." Risk Factors for Femicide concludes that, under certain conditions, "arrest can indeed be protective against domestic violence escalating to lethality." (...)

From :
http://endabuse.org/programs/display.php3?DocID=242




* The Gender Budget Analysts Requirements

THE GENDER BUDGET ANALYSIS REQUIREMENTS
  1. Statistics disaggregated by sex:
    • Expenditure and revenue;
    • Unpaid caring economy;
    • Micro analytic model over economic and other behavior sensitive to gender differentials.
  2. Sensitivity to gender segregation, cultural practices and gender norms (and how policy support and reconstruct these);
  3. Co-operation across government agencies and across policy process;
  4. Awareness of the scope of gender issues and ability to search out more hidden aspects of gender inequality;
  5. Tools to assess the aims and priorities attached to policy;
  6. Awareness of complexity of gender inequalities needed in the process of setting goals and targets;
  7. Ability to locate the policy inn the particular social phenomena.
THE MOST FREQUENTLY ASKED QUESTIONS IN GENDER BUDGETING:
  • Who is the recipient?
  • How is spending distributed? (what are the implication in the short and long term for the gender distribution of resources; and issue of paid and unpaid work)
  • Is provision adequate to the needs of women and men?
  • In what ways and how policy affect gender norms and roles?
  • In what ways gender is taken into account in policy formulation, design and implementation?
  • What are the priorities given to reduce gender inequality
From : UNIFEM www.unifem.undp.org  www.unifem.undp.org 





* "Violence - Masculinity - Peace"

TOWARDS A CULTURE OF PEACE

In order to effectively reduce violence and gradually minimise it among the human race into merely an exceptional phenomenon or disordered behaviour, violence must be addressed in several ways and at various levels as appropriate. The conferences and presentations discussed in this report have brought up at least the following ways of addressing the issue:

- Analysing the different forms of masculinity; revealing the violent forms, and working towards changing them;

- Revealing and questioning the values promoting or glamorising violence - competition, hardness, insensitivity, idolising the winners at war, sports and business life;

- Analysing and questioning the male roles and ideals, "the male honour" prevailing in the male culture;

- Profoundly transforming the upbringing of boys;

- Developing and valuing fatherhood; and developing and introducing to men and boys "good" fatherhood skills and qualities;

- Integrating the gender perspective into school education for creating awareness of the different positions of boys and girls within the family, in culture and reproduction, and for the advancement of their growth into balanced personalities and into men and women with mutual respect;

- Developing legislation on violence against women for criminalising it in all its forms and providing women with all possible protection when facing violence or being threatened by it;

- Increasing the number of shelters for women and giving every support to their work- they will remain necessary for quite some time;

- Helping men to abandon their violent behaviour by establishing support and therapy services and by developing appropriate therapies;

- Encouraging men to establish their own groups and voluntary activities to combat men’s violence against women, and providing support for such movements;

- Revealing violent and aggressive competitive sports - including boxing, ice hockey, car racing - and protesting their promotion in the media and in the upbringing of boys both in the home and at schools;

- Developing and strengthening security structures based on cooperation, interaction and mutual trust to substitute security policies based on the military and arms;

- Abolishing obligatory military service; adopting voluntary military training and developing alternative or substitute forms of community service as steps towards a culture of peace where soldiers are not needed;

- Increasing the proportion of women in politics, foreign policy and international decision-making;

- Promoting and further securing equality between women and men both through legislative and administrative means and through influencing public opinion and shaping attitudes and values, thus building a culture of equality and peace.

Violence against women cannot be eliminated until real equality between men and women in private lives, politics, working life and culture at large is achieved. This opinion was repeatedly emphasised in the speeches, discussions and recommendations at all these conferences. However, merely technical or statistical equality will not suffice: we must achieve a situation where men acknowledge women’s equal human dignity despite their differences and discover new, rich masculinity with all the possibilities entailed therein.

From : "Violence - Masculinity - Peace" Report by HILKKA PIETILÄ (1997)
http://www.europrofem.org/02.info/22contri/2.04.en/4en.viol/02en_vio.htm#TOWARDS%20A%20CULTURE%20OF%20PEACE


* Promoting a New Vision of Masculinity

Women cannot achieve sexual and reproductive health without the participation of men.

One clear example is the spread of HIV. Men are involved in almost every case of transmission of the virus and usually have greater power to protect themselves and their partners. Coercion and abuse, including rape, increase the risks.

The AIDS pandemic has helped underscore the linkages between power relations and sexual and reproductive health. And it has demonstrated that half of the population has been neglected in terms of reproductive and sexual health.

However, this is changing. New research shows that many men want to be caring partners and that many welcome the idea of mutually satisfying relationships built on trust and communication. UNFPA is committed to finding more effective strategies to encourage this.

Continued progress in fully engaging men and boys as partners who take responsibility for their sexual behaviour and who respect the rights of women and girls will enhance all aspects of sexual and reproductive health, including family planning and the care of children.

Results of the Demographic and Health Surveys

Although there is striking regional variation, recent surveys suggest men have a stronger interest in family planning and reproductive health issues, and are more likely to approve of family planning and to know about contraception, than stereotypes suggest. While men tend to want more children than women, in most of the countries surveyed, the differences in reproductive intentions between men and women are small. A review of research on reproductive health and AIDS in sub-Saharan Africa concluded that failure to target men in reproductive health interventions has weakened the impact of reproductive health programmes.

(...) From : http://www.unfpa.org/gender/male_involve.htm





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14 - Livre / Book

A Sos Sexisme,

Bonjour,

Je découvre votre site et je souhaite porter à votre connaissance, et peut-être à celle de ses visiteurs, l'ouvrage de Vinciane Pinte, La domination féminine. Une mystification publicitaire, que je viens de publier dans la collection "Liberté j'écris ton nom" que je dirige aux Editions Espace de Libertés et Labor (Bruxelles). Comme le sous-titre l'indique, il s'agit d'une analyse critique des publicités qui aujourd'hui semblent inverser les rapports de domination hommes/femmes et dont l'effet est, en réalité, de renforcer le système de cette domination. Vous trouverez plus de renseignements sur ce titre et cette collection sur le site indiqué ci-dessous.

De tout coeur avec votre combat, bien à vous,
?param Brush Script MT>Pascal DurandBR>?/fontfamily>Directeur de la collection « Liberté j'écris ton nom » http://www.ulb.ac.be/cal/Libertejecristonnom1.html




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SOS SEXISME