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Published
by the International
Institute for Sustainable Development (IISD)
Vol. 05 No. 141
Friday, 3 March 2000
HIGHLIGHTS FROM CSW-44:
28 FEBRUARY – 2 MARCH 2000
The Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) held the first
part of its 44th session from 28 February to 2 March 2000 to
follow-up on the Fourth World Conference on Women (FWCW) and
to review and appraise the implementation of the Platform for
Action (PFA). The CSW will continue to meet until 17 March
2000 as a Preparatory Committee (PrepCom) for the UN General
Assembly Special Session on "Women 2000: Gender equality,
development and peace for the 21st century."
A BRIEF HISTORY OF THE BEIJING PROCESS
In 1972, the United Nations General Assembly (GA), in
resolution 3010 (XXVII), proclaimed 1975 International Women’s
Year, to be devoted to intensified action to promote equality
between men and women, to ensure full integration of women in
the total development effort, and to increase women’s
contributions to the strengthening of world peace. In
resolution 3520 (XXX), the GA proclaimed 1976-1985 the United
Nations Decade for Women: Equality, Development and Peace.
FOURTH WORLD CONFERENCE ON WOMEN: The FWCW was held in
Beijing, China, from 4-15 September 1995. An estimated 50,000
government delegates, UN representatives, NGOs and members of
the media attended the conference and its parallel NGO Forum
at Huairou. The principal themes of the Conference were the
advancement and empowerment of women in relation to women’s
human rights, women and poverty, women and decision-making,
the girl-child, violence against women and other areas of
concern. At the end of the Conference, delegates adopted the
Beijing Declaration and PFA. The PFA sets out an agenda for
empowering women and accelerating implementation of the
Nairobi Forward-Looking Strategy (NFLS), and aims to achieve
significant change by the year 2000.
Beijing Declaration and Platform For Action: The
Beijing Declaration aims at accelerating the implementation of
the NFLS. It deals with removing the obstacles to women's
public participation in all spheres of public and private life
through a full and equal share in economic, social, cultural
and political decision-making.
The PFA acknowledges that significant progress will depend
on building strategic partnerships and involving all
stakeholders in the efforts towards change. The action plan
sets time-specific targets, committing nations to carry out
concrete actions in areas such as health, education,
decision-making and legal reforms with the ultimate goal of
eliminating all forms of discrimination against women in both
public and private life. PFA implementation is mainly the
responsibility of governments, but it also involves
institutions in the public, private and non-governmental
sectors at all levels. The PFA identifies 12 areas of concern:
poverty, education and training, health, violence, armed
conflict, economy, decision-making, institutional mechanisms,
human rights, media, environment and the girl-child.
Beijing +5: In Resolution 52/100, the UN General
Assembly decided to convene a Special Session to review and
appraise progress in implementing the NFLS and the Beijing PFA
to take place five years after the FWCW, and to deliberate on
further actions and initiatives. This review is not intended
to renegotiate existing arrangements, but will assess
successes, failures and obstacles to goals set at Nairobi and
Beijing. The Special Session is scheduled to take place from
5-9 June 2000 in New York.
In Resolution 52/231, the UN General Assembly designated
the CSW to act as the Preparatory Committee for the Special
Session during its 43rd and 44th sessions in March 1999 and
March 2000. The GA invited the Commission to propose the
agenda and documentation for the Special Session and to focus
in particular on the report requested from the
Secretary-General to contain suggestions on further actions
and initiatives. The Committee was asked to pay particular
attention to mainstreaming a gender perspective and common
trends and themes across the 12 critical areas of concern set
out in the PFA. To enhance participation in the Beijing +5
process, those NGOs that were accredited to the FWCW were
invited to attend the 43rd and 44th sessions of the CSW.
REPORT OF CSW-44
Organizational matters: During
its first week, CSW-44 included over 600 participants,
including ministers and other high-level government officials,
UN agency representatives, international and non-governmental
organizations and the media. Over the course of the four-day
meeting, participants of CSW-44 met in eight plenary sessions
and delegations met twice in a closed Working Group on
Communications. Delegates addressed: the follow-up to the FWCW,
the review and appraisal of the implementation of the PFA, and
the follow-up to ECOSOC resolutions and decisions. On
Wednesday, 1 March, a panel discussion was held on emerging
issues, trends and new approaches to issues affecting women or
gender equality. On Thursday, 2 March, delegates adopted the
provisional agenda for CSW-45 (E/CN.6/2000/L.7,
E/CN.6/2000/CRP.3) and the report of CSW-44 (E/CN.6/2000/L.3.)
Summary of proposals: On Thursday, 2 March, delegates
adopted four new resolutions relating to:
Release of women and children taken hostage, including
those subsequently imprisoned, in armed conflicts
(E/CN.6/2000/L.2);
Situation of women and girls in Afghanistan
(E/CN.6/2000/L.4);
Situation of and assistance to Palestinian women
(E/CN.6/2000/ L.5); and
Women, the girl child and HIV/AIDS (E/CN.6/2000/L.6).
Release of Women and Children Taken Hostage, Including
those Subsequently Imprisoned, in Armed Conflicts: The
resolution reaffirms the importance of both international
humanitarian law and the implementation of the PFA in the
context of women and children in armed conflicts and their
release in the case of hostage-taking and imprisonment.
Operative paragraphs condemn violent acts against civilian
women and children in areas of armed conflict and urge
involved parties to respect international humanitarian law and
to protect and release women and children taken hostage or
imprisoned, and to provide them with humanitarian assistance.
The resolution requests the Secretary-General and relevant
international organizations to facilitate the release of women
and children taken hostage and imprisoned in armed conflict,
and to report on the implementation of the resolution at
CSW-45.
Situation of Women and Girls in Afghanistan: The
resolution condemns the continuing grave violations of women’s
and girls’ human rights in all areas of Afghanistan as well
as continued restrictions on women’s access to health care,
education and employment outside the home. The resolution
urges all Afghan parties to take measures to ensure: the
repeal of legislation and other measures that discriminate
against women and girls; effective participation of women in
civil, cultural, economic, political and social life; respect
for the equal right of women to work; respect for the equal
right of women and girls to education without discrimination;
respect for the right of women to security of person; respect
for freedom of movement for women; and respect for women’s
and girls’ access to necessary facilities to protect their
right to the highest attainable standard of physical and
mental health. In addition, the resolution: appeals to all
states, the international community and the UN to ensure that
all humanitarian assistance to and activities in Afghanistan
are based on the principle of non-discrimination; urges states
to continue to give special attention to the promotion and
protection of women’s human rights in Afghanistan; welcomes
the establishment of the positions of Gender Advisor and Human
Rights Advisor at the UN Office of the Resident Coordinator
for Afghanistan; and urges all Afghan factions to ensure the
safety and protection of all UN and humanitarian workers in
Afghanistan and to allow them to carry out their work
unhindered.
With one revision noting the report of the Special
Rapporteur on Violence Against Women, and another requesting
the Secretary-General to continue to review and submit a
report to the Commission on the situation of women and girls
in Afghanistan, the resolution was adopted.
Situation of and Assistance to Palestinian Women: The
resolution: recalls the special situation of Palestinian women
in the follow-up to the Beijing Declaration, the PFA, the NFLS,
relevant UN resolutions and the Declaration on the Elimination
of Violence Against Women; stresses the need for
implementation of existing agreements and a final settlement;
and notes the continuing difficult situation of Palestinian
women in the Occupied Palestinian Territory. Operational
paragraphs call for a successful peace process with tangible
progress for Palestinian women and reaffirm the negative
impacts of Israeli occupation. The resolution calls on Israel
to comply with the Universal Declaration of Human Rights and
other relevant conventions and facilitate the return of
refugees and displaced Palestinian women, and calls for
financial and technical assistance from the international
community. Final paragraphs request the CSW to continue
monitoring aspects of the NFLS and the PFA relevant to
Palestinian women, and the Secretary-General to review the
situation.
Commenting on the resolution, ISRAEL said the situation of
women in the Occupied Palestinian Territory was better than
that of women in most countries and called for focused
attention to urgent women’s issues rather than to political
ones. SYRIA called for, and LEBANON supported, the right of
Palestinian women to self-determination and lamented the
absence of reference to Security Council resolutions and to
the principle of "Land for Peace" in the text of the
resolution. IRAN said a comprehensive and fair solution for
peace rests in the restoration of all rights of Palestinian
people and the end of the Israeli occupation.
Women, the Girl Child and HIV/AIDS: The
resolution recognizes that the proportion of women with HIV is
growing in every region, and girls in the 15-24 age bracket
are at a higher risk of infection than boys. It notes that the
majority of women and girls in developing countries do not
enjoy full access to education and health care, and are more
vulnerable to infection than men physiologically and because
of their subordinate status. Acknowledging that millions of
women do not have access to various ways of lowering infection
rates, such as drugs and education, the resolution recalls the
work of various UN agencies in offering different forms of
empowerment and support to women with HIV/AIDS. The text
reaffirms the right of women and girls to health, education,
and protection from discrimination due to infection. The
resolution urges governments to improve women�s economic
independence and promote their overall advancement so they may
better protect themselves, and requests governments and the
international community to make HIV/AIDS a development
priority, particularly in the worst-hit regions of Africa.
The resolution calls on governments to: provide legal
protection for people with HIV/AIDS; support AIDS orphans and
women caring for infected patients; adopt integrated AIDS
prevention policies tailored to women and girls; support women�s
groups in changing harmful practices and end all forms of
violence against women that aggravate the epidemic; and ensure
availability of comprehensive health care. It calls upon
UNAIDS to: intensify its efforts to assist governments in
determining the best policies and programmes to prevent HIV
infection among women and girls; place greater emphasis on the
education of men and boys about their roles in preventing
transmission; and give priority attention to women and girls
in Africa. It calls on relevant UN entities to incorporate
HIV/AIDS prevention, especially among women and children, into
their activities.
THINGS TO LOOK FOR TODAY.
Plenary : The CSW, acting as the
PrepCom to the Special Session, will convene at 10:00 am in
Conference Room 1 to hear opening statements. Two draft
resolutions on the participation and accreditation of NGOs at
the UN Special Session will be introduced for adoption by the
Plenary in the afternoon session starting at 3:00 pm. |
This issue of the Earth Negotiations Bulletin
� <enb@iisd.org> is written and edited by Peter Doran <pfdoran@hotmail.com>,
Jan-Stefan Fritz <j.fritz@lse.ac.uk> and Jonathon Hanks <jon.hanks@iiiee.lu.se>.
The Editor is Pamela Chasek, Ph.D. <pam@iisd.org> and the
Managing Editor is Langston James "Kimo" Goree <kimo@iisd.org>.
Digital editing by Leila Mead <leila@interport.net>, logistics
and electronic posting by Z�na-Gabrielle Hailu (Gaby) <zhailu@iisd.org>.
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