To coincide with International Women’s Day earlier this week, the Mothers Union issued a statement urging more involvement for women in peace negotiations:
We live in a fundamentally unequal world. People’s quality of life, the opportunities they have and their experiences of the world differ dramatically based on factors such as their place of birth; economic standing; age; marital status; disability; sexuality and gender.
Women and girls continue to bear the brunt of gender inequality. Generally, women have fewer legal rights than men, are more likely to experience violence because of their gender, are prevented from accessing justice, and own significantly less land and property than men. On top of these, women are also prevented from accessing decision making structures and their voices are blocked by cultural and structural factors, with only 22% of global parliamentarians women.
One key area in which women’s voices are blocked is in formal peacebuilding, and processes seeking to end violent armed conflict. Whilst women are disproportionately affected by many aspects of conflict, their voices are not being heard during peace processes, and their unique needs remain unrepresented. Between 1992 and 2011 only three percent of signatories to peace agreements were women and between 1990 and 2010 only 16% of peace agreements contained references to the specific needs and experiences of women. Time and again, we hear stories of women being purposefully excluded from formal aspects of peace building, from the British Government cancelling transportation for women to attend peace talks in 1915, to recent peace talks about Syria, where women were excluded as the warring parties refused to allow them in to negotiations.
Despite their experiences, women should not be viewed as passive victims of armed conflict. Women can be powerful actors in peacebuilding, and dynamic drivers of peace. In fact they have a hugely positive impact on the quality and duration of the peace, with studies showing that when women are included in the process, the chance of a peace agreement lasting at least 15 years increases by 35%. A study from Sierra Leone found that around 55% of former combatants said that women in their community had helped them reintegrate after conflict.
Since 1876 when Mothers’ Union was founded, it has sought to promote conditions in society favourable to stable family life and the protection of children and to support those whose lives have met with adversity. Around the world, many of our 4 million members in the 83 countries in which they live and work, are confronting women’s roles as peace builders and reconcilers head on. Mothers’ Union members are directly affected by the everyday realities of war. They are peacemakers at an individual level, in families and within their communities, as well as advocating with decision makers and those involved in formal peace channels. In the DRC, Mothers’ Union practically supports women affected by sexual violence in conflict, and advocates on their behalf with decision makers at national and international level. In South Sudan, Mothers’ Union members are actively involved in getting women’s voices heard throughout the peace processes. They also provide practical support to those displaced by the war, and have been involved in facilitating community healing and reconciliation processes.
Mothers’ Union is also looking at how as an international network, and one of the oldest women’s organisations in the world, it can work in a coordinated manner to advocate for peace. When we look at the need around us, and see communities devastated by violence and conflict, our response must be to act, and to make sure that we speak up for, and raise the voices of women around the world!