Beijing +5
[ Back to
Beijing+5 ]
Follow-up to and implementation of the Beijing
Declaration and Platform for Action
Report of the Secretary-General, December 1999
Follow-up to and implementation of the Beijing
Declaration and Platform for Action
Commission on the Status of Women
Document E/CN.6/2000/2
Forty-fourth session, 1 December 1999
Summary
The General Assembly, in its resolution 53/120 of 9
December 1998, requested the Secretary-General to report annually to it,
through the Commission on the Status of Women and the Economic and Social
Council, on follow-up to and progress in the implementation of the Beijing
Declaration and Platform for Action. Similar mandates were also contained
in General Assembly resolutions 50/203, 51/69 and 52/100. The present
report emphasizes efforts undertaken by the Secretariat in support of
mainstreaming a gender perspective and follow-up activities, including
activities undertaken by non-governmental organizations, since the
submission of the previous report of the Secretary-General on the subject
(E/CN.6/1999/2 and Add.1). It contains a response to resolution 43/2 of
the Commission on the Status of Women on women, the girl child and human
immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome. The present
report has one addendum, which contains a joint work plan for the Division
for the Advancement of Women and the Office of the United Nations High
Commissioner for Human Rights.
Contents
I Introduction
II. Progress in the follow-up to the Fourth World Conference
on Women and in mainstreaming a gender perspective within the United
Nations system
A. General Assembly and Economic and Social Council
B. Activities in support of mainstreaming a gender
perspective into the work of the United Nations system
C. ACC Inter-Agency Committee on Women and Gender Equality
D. Update on national action plans
E. Reported activities of non-governmental organizations
and other institutions of civil society
Information supplied in accordance with specific
mandates
A. Situation of Palestinian women and assistance provided
by organizations in the United Nations system
B. Release of women and children taken hostage in armed
conflicts and imprisoned
C. Women, the girl child and human immunodeficiency
virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome
I. Introduction
1. The Economic and Social Council, in its resolution
1996/6, on follow-up to the Fourth World Conference on Women, established
the work programme of the Commission on the Status of Women, in particular
the items to be included on the agenda of the Commission. As regards
documentation for the sessions of the Commission, the Council decided,
inter alia, that under item 3 (a) of the Commission's agenda, a review by
the Secretary-General of mainstreaming a gender perspective within the
United Nations system should be prepared on an annual basis.
2. In its resolution 53/120 of 9 December 1998, the
General Assembly requested the Secretary-General to report annually to it,
the Commission on the Status of Women and the Economic and Social Council
on follow-up to and implementation of the Beijing Declaration and Platform
for Action. Similar mandates were contained in General Assembly
resolutions 50/203, 51/69, and 52/100.
3. In each of the three reports submitted in the course
of a year, the information that is most pertinent to the respective
intergovernmental body is provided. The report to the Commission on the
Status of Women emphasizes efforts undertaken by the Secretariat in
support of mainstreaming a gender perspective and follow-up activities
undertaken by non-governmental organizations. The report to the Economic
and Social Council focuses on facilitating the coordination function of
the Council. The report to the General Assembly contains information from
all entities of the United Nations system, including specialized agencies
and international financial institutions, and an analysis of activities
undertaken at the national level and by non-governmental organizations and
civil society.
4. Section II of the present report has been prepared in
compliance with General Assembly resolution 53/120. Section III responds
to resolution 1999/15 of the Economic and Social Council on Palestinian
women and to resolution 43/1 of the Commission on the Status of Women on
the release of women and children taken hostage in armed conflict and
imprisoned.
5. Section IV responds to resolution 43/2 of the
Commission on the Status of Women on women, the girl child and human
immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome.
6. In addition, the present report includes an addendum,
section V (E/CN.6/2000/2/Add.1), which responds to the request made by the
Commission on Human Rights in its resolution 1999/41 and by the Commission
on the Status of Women in its resolution 39/5 that a joint work plan be
made available to the Commission on Human Rights at its fifty-fifth
session and to the Commission on the Status of Women at its forty-fourth
session.
II. Progress in the follow-up to the Fourth World
Conference on Women and in mainstreaming a gender perspective within the
United Nations system
7. At its forty-fourth session, the Commission on the
Status of Women will continue to conduct its assessment of progress
achieved at different levels since the adoption of the Beijing Declaration
and Platform for Action1 and in gender mainstreaming. In particular, it
will undertake a comprehensive review and appraisal of the implementation
of the Platform for Action and preparations for the special session of the
General Assembly to be held from 5 to 9 June 2000. An assessment of
activities of the United Nations system in follow-up to the Platform for
Action in accordance with the system-wide medium-term plan for the
advancement of women for the period 1996-2001 is contained in
E/CN.6/2000/3. The present report complements those reports.
A. General Assembly and Economic and Social Council
1. Fifty-fourth session of the General Assembly
8. The report of the Secretary-General on the
implementation of the outcome of the Fourth World Conference on Women
(A/54/264) focused on follow-up activities undertaken by entities of the
United Nations system, including human and financial means of
implementation. The General Assembly adopted a resolution on follow-up to
the Fourth World Conference on Women and full implementation of the
Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action (resolution 54/141 of 17
December 1999).
9. The Assembly also adopted a resolution on
preparations for the special session, which had been recommended for
adoption by the Commission on the Status of Women acting as preparatory
committee for the special session at its second session in March 1999,
through the Economic and Social Council (resolution 54/142). In that
resolution, the Assembly took decisions on the format and agenda of the
special session and on the documentation to be submitted to the
preparatory committee at its third session in 2000. The preparatory
committee will have before it a comprehensive report containing a review
and appraisal of the implementation of the Platform for Action
(E/CN.6/2000/PC/2), addressing achievements as well as obstacles
encountered in the implementation of the 12 critical areas of concern.
Emerging trends and issues and further actions and initiatives are
highlighted in another report (E/CN.6/2000/PC/4). Discussions with
relevant actors of civil society on the implementation of the Beijing
Platform for Action have continued, as called for by the Assembly, and the
results of the on-line working groups on the areas of concern will also be
available to the preparatory committee (E/CN.6/2000/PC/CRP.1).
10. Encouraged by the General Assembly, the regional
commissions have carried out, or are planning to hold, regional
preparatory events that will provide input into the preparations for the
special session. The results of the regional meetings will be available to
the preparatory committee. Within given time constraints for finalization
of documentation, the results are also taken into account in documentation
prepared by the Division for the Advancement of Women.
11. In the same resolution, the General Assembly
encouraged all entities of the United Nations system to be involved in
preparatory activities and to participate at the highest level in the
special session. An assessment of activities undertaken by the United
Nations system in support of implementation of the Platform is contained
in a report that is before the Commission on the Status of Women
(E/CN.6/2000/3). United Nations-system participation in preparatory
activities is currently a focus of inter-agency cooperation and
coordination. The Chairperson of the Inter-agency Committee on Women and
Gender Equality has encouraged the active involvement of all United
Nations entities in that process. This could include support for
preparations at the national level, such as awareness-raising, support for
activities of national machineries and of non-governmental organizations,
and the provision of feedback to the Secretariat on emerging trends and
issues; provision of substantive input to the global preparatory process,
such as studies or reports on particular issues falling within an entity's
area of responsibility; and/or the organization of side events, such as
panels, workshops and film-screenings, during the preparatory sessions and
at the special session. Emphasis is also placed on ensuring that heads of
agencies give due attention to, and personally participate in, the special
session.
12. The Assembly decided that non-governmental
organizations in consultative status with the Economic and Social Council
and non-governmental organizations that were accredited to the Fourth
World Conference on Women may participate in the special session without
creating a precedent for future sessions of the Assembly. It decided to
defer consideration of all the modalities for participation of
non-governmental organizations in the special session until the next
session of the preparatory committee. The preparatory committee is thus
invited to consider this matter at its third session in March 2000.
13. In accordance with the same resolution, the Bureau
of the preparatory committee convened a series of open-ended informal
consultations to consider preparations for the special session. It
submitted a draft of a political declaration, to be adopted by the special
session, for consideration by States, and convened several informal
meetings to discuss the draft. It also held informal consultations on a
possible second document that might result from the special session. Based
on these informal consultations, agreement was reached on the structure of
a second outcome document. The Chairperson of the Bureau of the
preparatory committee was entrusted with the preparation of a draft for
consideration by delegations, in consultation with the Secretariat and the
Bureau, and taking into account suggestions made by delegations during the
consultations. Informal consultations on the modalities of participation
of non-governmental organizations in the special session also took place
in November and December.
14. The Assembly, at the recommendation of the
Commission on the Status of Women and the Economic and Social Council,
adopted and opened for signature, ratification and accession, the Optional
Protocol to the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination against Women (resolution 54/4). The Assembly thus
fulfilled one of the commitments made by Governments at the World
Conference on Human Rights (1993) and the Fourth World Conference on Women
(1995). The Optional Protocol was opened for signature in a ceremony on 10
December 1999, Human Rights Day, and 23 States signed that day (Austria,
Belgium, Bolivia, Chile, Colombia, Costa Rica, Czech Republic, Denmark,
Ecuador, Finland, France, Germany, Greece, Iceland, Italy, Liechtenstein,
Luxembourg, Mexico, the Netherlands, Norway, Senegal, Slovenia, and
Sweden). The Optional Protocol will enter into force three months after
the tenth instrument of ratification has been deposited with the
Secretary-General. The Optional Protocol and its significance for women
were the theme of a panel discussion to mark Human Rights Day at United
Nations Headquarters. The Secretary-General made an opening statement. Ms.
Aída González Martínez, Chairperson of CEDAW, Ms. Aloisia Wörgetter,
Chairperson of the working group of the Commission on the Status of Women
that drafted the optional protocol, Mr. Bacre Waly Ndiaye, Director of the
New York Office of the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights, the Honourable Sujata Manohar, retired judge of the Supreme
Court of India, and Ms. Fauzija Kassindja, of Equality Now, served on the
panel, which was moderated by the Special Adviser on Gender Issues and
Advancement of Women. The Special Adviser and the High Commissioner for
Human Rights issued a joint statement on the Optional Protocol and its
significance for women worldwide.
2. Economic and Social Council, substantive session of
2000
15. Action taken by intergovernmental bodies in 1999, in
particular the functional commissions of the Economic and Social Council,
has been reported to the Council (E/1999/54). The Commission's attention
is drawn to the decision of the Commission on Human Rights to appoint a
Special Rapporteur on the human rights of migrants, requesting the Special
Rapporteur to take into account a gender perspective when requesting and
analysing information and to give special attention to the occurrence of
multiple discrimination and violence against migrant women. The Special
Rapporteur has met with the Division for the Advancement of Women to
discuss the work done by the Division with regard to violence against
migrant women workers, to exchange relevant information, and to discuss
opportunities for cooperation. At its most recent session, the General
Assembly adopted resolution 54/138 on this issue. (See also the report of
the Secretary-General in document A/54/342.)
16. Information on the outcome of the Council's
high-level segment of 1999 on the theme "The role of work and
employment in poverty eradication: the advancement and empowerment of
women" was provided to the Assembly (A/54/264).
17. The Council decided that the theme of its
coordination segment in the year 2000 would be "Assessment of the
progress made within the United Nations system, through the conference
reviews, in the promotion of an integrated and coordinated implementation
of and follow-up to major United Nations Conferences and summits in the
economic, social and related fields" (Council decision 1999/281). The
Council's review of progress made in conference follow-up provides an
opportunity to assess, and provide further guidance also on cross-cutting
issues, especially on gender mainstreaming. In this regard, it will be
recalled that the Council's agreed conclusions 1997/2 on gender
mainstreaming have been instrumental in promoting progress in gender
mainstreaming at the intergovernmental level, including the Council's
functional commissions, and throughout the United Nations system with
regard to normative and policy work, as well as in operational activities.
The coordination segment of 2000 also provides an opportunity for an
in-depth assessment of the follow-up given to gender-specific
recommendations of other global conferences. This assessment should enable
the Council to provide further guidance on how to achieve an optimal
balance in intergovernmental and UN system work between women-specific
activities in the framework of follow-up to the Fourth World Conference on
Women and other conferences and summits, and the mainstreaming of a gender
perspective into all policies and programmes, independent of their
specificity with regard to women. The Commission's attention is drawn to a
note by the Secretariat on the Commission's follow-up to the Council's
resolutions and decisions (E/CN.6/2000/5).
18. In accordance with the Beijing Platform for Action
and resolutions of the General Assembly, the Council has considered
follow-up to the Platform for Action at each of its three main segments.
Since the adoption of the Platform for Action, a fourth main segment, on
humanitarian affairs, has been added to the Council's agenda. At its
substantive session in 1999, in its agreed conclusions on the segment, the
Council stressed the need to integrate a gender perspective into the
planning and implementation of activities concerning humanitarian
emergencies. The Inter-Agency Standing Committee has adopted a policy
statement on the integration of a gender perspective into humanitarian
assistance. The Commission may wish to consider recommending to the
Council that the gender dimensions in humanitarian affairs should be
addressed at one of the future segments.
B. Activities in support of mainstreaming a gender
perspective into the work of the United Nations system
19. The Special Adviser on Gender Issues and Advancement
of Women has continued to work with senior officials in departments and
offices of the United Nations and in the entities of the United Nations
system to increase attention to gender issues in all sectoral areas,
especially through improved use of the gender mainstreaming strategy. The
capacity of the Special Adviser in this regard has been strengthened by
the recruitment of a Principal Officer on Gender Mainstreaming in her
office in September 1999, funded through extrabudgetary contributions, to
work in a catalytic and advisory manner to support the implementation of
mainstreaming in entities of the United Nations system. The Special
Adviser has also given particular attention to preparations for the
special session of the General Assembly, including regional preparations.
A summary of such activities is given below.
20. In a follow-up to General Assembly resolution 52/100
and to Economic and Social Council agreed conclusions 1997/2 on gender
mainstreaming, in which all bodies that deal with programme and budgetary
matters are requested to ensure that all programmes, medium-term plans and
programme budgets visibly mainstream a gender perspective, the Committee
on Programme and Coordination expressed the view that the Secretariat
should make every effort to address the issue of gender sensitivity in the
budgetary process.2 In response to these mandates, the proposed programme
budget for the biennium 2000-2001 discusses the implications of gender
mainstreaming as one of the factors underlying the budget proposals.3 In
response to the budget preparation instructions for the proposed programme
budget, specific attention has been paid by a number of departments to
gender mainstreaming. The document notes that although the concept may not
be directly identified at the aggregate level of outputs and activities in
the budget document, it will continue to be addressed at the policy and
programme development stage, as well as during implementation, monitoring
and evaluation of the outcome of the Organization's programmes and
activities, in order to determine the extent to which the concerns and
needs of the beneficiaries of the Organization's work - women as well as
men - are adequately met. Such information would provide useful feedback
for the preparation of future programme budgets and the determination of
resource allocation.
21. Further insights into possible modalities, and
benefits, of gender mainstreaming in budgets in the United Nations system
are expected to be gained also from one of the ongoing projects of the ACC
Inter-agency Committee on Women and Gender Equality. Phase I, an inventory
of work on institutional budgets outside the United Nations system,
started in December 1999. Phase II will look at the United Nations system
itself, identifying what has been done and the potential that exists for
reflecting gender equality in budgets. An interim report is expected to be
ready at the time of the forty-fourth session of the Commission on the
Status of Women and will be presented in a workshop. Phase III will look
in depth at a selected number of United Nations entities, making proposals
for further steps.
22. In conjunction with her participation in the
high-level segment of the Economic and Social Council on the role of work
and employment in poverty
eradication: the advancement and empowerment of women,
in July 1999 in Geneva, the Special Adviser met with the heads of the
World Health Organization, the International Labour Organization and the
International Trade Centre, with the United Nations High Commissioner for
Human Rights, as well as with officials of the Economic Commission for
Europe, UNHCR, the International Telecommunication Union, and the World
Intellectual Property Organization. The meetings allowed for exchanges of
information on preparations under way in the agencies for the special
session, on progress and specific steps taken to increase gender
mainstreaming, and on issues of achieving the goals of gender balance and
a gender-sensitive work environment. The Special Adviser invited agencies
to make specific contributions to the preparations, in the form, for
example, of studies on particular issues or on how the operational
activities of the agencies benefit women and contribute to the achievement
of gender equality at the national level. During a meeting with senior
women staff at Geneva, issues with regard to the achievement of the
Organization's gender balance goals and other work-related matters were
discussed.
23. The Special Adviser and the Division for the
Advancement of Women continue to support the Department of Peacekeeping
Operations/Lessons Learned Unit in the implementation of the project on
mainstreaming a gender perspective in multidimensional peacekeeping
operations.4 After the launching of the project in June 1999, a consultant
will join the Lessons Learned Unit in January 2000 to prepare a systematic
gender analysis of selected peacekeeping operations. It is expected that
the findings will be available in time for the special session.
24. The Special Adviser remains actively involved in the
work of the Afghanistan Support Group and continues to support the work of
the Gender Adviser to the United Nations system in Afghanistan.
Information and reports prepared by the Gender Adviser on the current
situation and its implications for United Nations system activities in
that country are regularly shared with the Inter-agency Committee on Women
and Gender Equality. The Special Adviser has also endeavoured to ensure
that the Gender Adviser participates in the meetings of the Afghanistan
Support Group.
25. The Special Adviser continues to support
preparations for the special session. She participated in two regional
preparatory meetings - namely, the Economic Commission for Africa (ECA)
sixth African Regional Conference on Women (22-27 November 1999, Addis
Ababa, Ethiopia) and the Arab Conference on Integrated Follow-up to Global
Conferences, held by the Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia
(ESCWA) (29 November to 1 December, Beirut, Lebanon). A representative of
the Office of the Special Adviser participated in the Economic and Social
Commission for Asia and the Pacific (ESCAP) high-level meeting to review
the implementation of the Jakarta Declaration and Platform for Action
(26-29 October 1999, Bangkok, Thailand).
26. Participation in these regional meetings provided
the opportunity for many informal meetings and discussions of the Special
Adviser with governmental representatives to assess the status of national
and regional preparations and to identify regional challenges, emerging
issues and trends, and strategies for further action. During these
missions, the Special Adviser also met with senior officials of regional
commissions and held informal inter-agency meetings with gender focal
points and field-based United Nations system representatives. It became
apparent during these meetings that further efforts are needed to
strengthen the flow of information between New York-based and field-based
offices, including national machinery for the advancement of women, on the
status of the global preparations for the special session. The Director of
the Division for the Advancement of Women will participate in the
remaining two regional preparatory meetings of ECE and of the Economic
Commission for Latin America and the Caribbean (ECLAC).
27. The Special Adviser attended FAO's High-level
Consultation on Rural Women and Information, on behalf of the
Secretary-General. The event was attended by over 360 participants from
118 countries, together with representatives from the United Nations
system and non-governmental organizations. The Consultation reviewed a
draft strategy for action on rural women as a follow-up to the Fourth
World Conference on Women and the World Food Summit (1996). The Special
Adviser moderated a panel on methodologies and approaches to bringing
information to rural areas, both through traditional forms of
communication and through new technologies. During the meeting, the
Special Adviser had opportunities to discuss follow-up to Beijing and
preparations for the special session with ministers from a number of
countries. She also participated in the UNESCO-sponsored Pan-African
Women's Conference for a Culture of Peace and Non-violence, held in
Zanzibar, United Republic of Tanzania, from 17 to 20 May 1999.
28. The Special Adviser opened and chaired the first day
of the Judicial Colloquium on the Application of International Human
Rights Law at the Domestic Level. The Colloquium, which was organized by
the Division for the Advancement of Women, in close consultation with
UNICEF, to commemorate the twentieth anniversary of the adoption of the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women
and the tenth anniversary of the adoption of the Convention on the Rights
of the Child, took place from 27 to 29 October at the United Nations
Office in Vienna. During the three-day event, almost 100 judges and
magistrates from 65 countries discussed opportunities for wider and more
routine use at the national level of the international human rights law
contained in the two Conventions as a way to advance the rights of women
and children, particularly girls. In plenary and working group sessions,
participants focused on three themes: nationality, and marriage and family
relations; violence against women; and women's and girls' work-related
rights. At the end of the three-day session, participants adopted a
communiqué. A comprehensive report containing keynote presentations and
working group papers will be issued by the Division in time for the
special session.
C. ACC Inter-Agency Committee on Women and Gender
Equality
29. Following the fourth session of the ACC Inter-agency
Committee on Women and Gender Equality (23-26 February 1999),
inter-sessional work on a number of topics was conducted by the
Committee's task managers. The Committee's fifth session will take place
from 23 to 25 February 2000. A series of informal meetings were held in
New York during the year. Based on a recommendation of the Inter-Agency
Committee at its fourth session, in February 1999, the Administrative
Committee on Coordination (ACC) adopted a statement as input to the
preparatory process. The statement will be made available to the
preparatory committee. The results of several of the Committee's ongoing
activities will also be provided as input to the preparatory process. The
Special Adviser, in her capacity as Chairperson of the Inter-Agency
Committee, will provide an oral report to the Commission/preparatory
committee on the inputs.
30. In response to a decision of the Committee, the
Division for the Advancement of Women, as the Committee's task manager,
organized a workshop on women's empowerment in the context of human
security. The workshop, which took place from 7 to 8 December 1999 in
Bangkok, was hosted by ESCAP. The meeting brought together participants
from a broad range of entities of the United Nations system and from the
Organisation for Economic Cooperation and Development/Development
Assistance Committee (OECD/DAC) Working Party on Gender Equality. Building
on two previous workshops (on gender mainstreaming in 1997, and on a
rights-based approach to gender equality in 1998) and in the context of
the special session of the General Assembly in June 2000, the discussions
focused on concrete actions to promote the interlinked issues of women's
empowerment, gender equality, and human security.
31. The workshop adopted a communiqué summarizing its
major findings. It noted that missing in discussions on human security has
been an understanding of the fundamental differences and inequalities
between women's security and men's security. The workshop identified five
specific and interrelated issues that need to be incorporated into the
discussion of human security - namely, violence against women and girls;
gender inequalities in control over resources; gender inequalities in
power and decision-making; women's human rights; and women (and men) as
actors, not victims. Noting gaps in gender awareness of both policy and
practice, the workshop proposed a number of recommendations for action to
promote women's empowerment in the context of human security. At the
policy level, they are:
(a) Incorporate gender-sensitive legislation and
adherence to CEDAW in policy discussions and actions;
(b) Build on experience in facilitating policy dialogue
that benefits from the interaction of non-governmental organizations and
other actors in civil society with Governments to promote women's
leadership;
(c) Establish effective accountability mechanisms for
gender equality through more consistent documentation and dissemination of
experiences and collection of data, disaggregated by sex, to influence
policy formulation and operational activities;
(d) Recognize the leadership and innovative role that
women are taking in conflict resolution and peace-building and support and
incorporate those efforts in conflict prevention and post-conflict
reconstruction.
32. At the level of practice, they are:
(a) Create an enabling environment that supports women's
empowerment and provides resources to organizations, including
non-governmental organizations, that are actively involved in this
process;
(b) Facilitate capacity development and improve legal
literacy to ensure more effective use of the CEDAW mechanism and its
Optional Protocol;
(c) Ensure women's participation and full gender
mainstreaming in mandates and missions related to peace promotion and
post-conflict reconstruction;
(d) Ensure that all reporting to intergovernmental
bodies on peace-building, peacekeeping and reconstruction gives consistent
attention to gender equality;
(e) Work to create a common database of materials
relevant to gender equality and human security, including lessons learned,
good practice, guidelines, terms of reference, training materials,
research results, and codes of conduct.
33. A report on the proceedings of the workshop is being
compiled by the Division for the Advancement of Women.
D. Update on national action plans
34. In the course of 1999, 11 Member States (Belgium,
Burundi, Cape Verde, Eritrea, Greece, Malawi, Namibia, Netherlands, Qatar,
Republic of Moldova, Yemen) and one observer (Switzerland) submitted their
national action plans to the Division for the Advancement of Women. A
total of 116 plans by Member States, two by observers and five by regional
and subregional groups had been received as of 1 December 1999. The
national action plans constituted the basis for the review and appraisal
of the Beijing Platform for Action. Many Member States built their replies
to the questionnaire on a review and appraisal of the national action
plan.
E. Reported activities of non-governmental organizations
and other
institutions of civil society
35. Since the issuance of the latest report of the
Secretary-General to the General Assembly on the implementation of the
outcome of the Fourth World Conference on Women (A/54/264), a number of
events have occurred at the international, regional and national levels
under the auspices of non-governmental organizations. Several initiatives
have also been taken by non-governmental organizations worldwide as part
of their preparations for the forthcoming special session of the General
Assembly. While these activities were not reported systematically to the
Secretariat, some of them have been brought to the attention of the
Division for the Advancement of Women.
36. Various non-governmental organizations have been
preparing their own reports on the progress of implementation as their
contribution to the special session. Soroptomists International sent a
questionnaire to its members worldwide to gather information. The
International Confederation of Free Trade Union (ICFTU) Equality Committee
will compile information collected from women trade unionists. Zonta
International also sent out a survey questionnaire to its clubs to gather
information about progress for women in each Zonta country and to
establish the skills necessary for effective advocacy through the process
of obtaining the information, and plans to feed the findings of the survey
into its preparation for the special session. The NGO Working Groups on
Girls (New York and Geneva) are in the process of completing an
alternative report to that of Governments, evaluating recent progress for
girls, to be presented to Governments and non-governmental organizations
at the special session. The purpose of the report is to document the gaps
between commitments and action, obstacles, and successful efforts by
Governments and civil society organizations.
37. Non-governmental organizations have been active in
compiling and disseminating information in order effectively to
participate in the review process as well as at the special session. A
scorecard/checklist for monitoring implementation of critical areas of
concern on women and the media has been completed by Global WENT 99 as a
possible template for other critical areas of concern of the Beijing
Platform for Action. It will be disseminated to media networks,
non-governmental organizations and other civil society organizations
worldwide. The International Women's Tribune Centre has published three
issues in a series entitled Preview 2000 that cover plans and preparations
for the five-year review of the Platform for Action. Isis
International-Manila has prepared the primer on the review process which
contains basic information on activities, schedules, contact organizations
and individuals involved in the preparations and the actual conduct of the
special session. The primer is designed to inform and encourage the
involvement of women's groups and organizations in the Asia and the
Pacific region in assessing an international policy document that seeks to
advance and promote women's empowerment and development.
38. Supported and sponsored by WomenWatch, WomenAction
2000 held a five-day workshop from 27 September to 2 October 1999 in
Seoul, Republic of Korea, to train regional information facilitators and
regional web site construction and maintenance people to develop a global
web site that would serve as a central site for the collection, sharing
and linking of information on the review process. The global web site was
launched on 26 November 1999 (http://www.womenaction2000.org).
39. The community of non-governmental organizations has
decided to hold an NGO working session from 3 to 4 June 2000, prior to the
special session. The Conference of Non-Governmental Organizations in
Consultative Relationship with the United Nations (CONGO) facilitated the
first meeting of the international planning committee on 11 August 1999.
The second meeting was held on 23 November 1999, facilitated by the Centre
for Women's Global Leadership.
40. As part of their campaign for the special session,
Equality Now issued Women's Action, to cite discriminatory laws that
remain in force despite repeated legal affirmations of the commitment to
equality that are often incorporated into national constitutions as well
as international law. Flora Tristan, in cooperation with UNICEF and
UNIFEM, has published case studies, entitled "Roads to Beijing",
which reflect on the Beijing process in Latin America and the Caribbean.
Network Women in Development Europe held a conference in Eede, the
Netherlands, from 28 to 30 May 1999, jointly with Society for
International Development and Vrouwenberaad Ontwikkelingssamenwerking, to
discuss how non-governmental organizations could effectively follow up on
the United Nations global conferences. The report of the conference was
published in October 1999, entitled "Linking up - Cairo, Copenhagen,
Beijing +5 reviews towards the 21st century".
41. The National Council for Research on Women, in
collaboration with the Division for the Advancement of Women and UNDP,
held its 1999 annual conference from 9 to 11 December 1999, focusing on
the visions and values of women's and girls' leadership and the five-year
review of implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action. A one-day
conference to review accomplishments since the Fourth World Conference on
Women was held in Chicago on 6 December 1999. Entitled "Women's
rights are human rights: exploring the local global linkages", the
conference was sponsored and organized by a number of non-governmental
organizations and women's groups working in the region.
III. Information supplied in accordance with specific
mandates
A. Situation of Palestinian women and assistance
provided by organizations in the United Nations system
42. The Economic and Social Council, in its resolution
1999/15, requested a report on the situation of Palestinian women and
assistance provided by organizations of the United Nations system. The
paragraphs below cover the period from September 1998 to September 1999
and are based on information from United Nations bodies monitoring the
situation of Palestinians in the occupied territories as well as in
refugee camps. Such bodies include the Special Committee to Investigate
Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the Palestinian People and
other Arabs of the Occupied Territories, the Office of the United Nations
Special Coordinator in the Occupied Territories (UNSCO) and the Special
Rapporteur of the Commission for Human Rights on Palestinian Territories
occupied since 1967. Information on assistance to Palestinian women was
requested from the United Nations system, and replies from six entities
have been included in the present report.
1. Situation of Palestinian women
43. In his report on economic and social conditions in
the West Bank and Gaza, the United Nations Special Coordinator in the
Occupied Territories stated that the overall economic performance in the
West Bank and Gaza had improved since 1997. The positive economic growth
rate had led to an increase in employment and higher household incomes in
the occupied territories. Women's unemployment rate in 1998 declined by
21.3 per cent, to 16.9 per cent; for men it fell to 15.5 per cent. The
overall proportion of women active in the labour force declined in 1998,
falling to 11.7 per cent from 12.3 per cent in 1997.5 In 1998, over 92 per
cent of all new job opportunities in the West Bank and Gaza were filled by
men. This could be due to the fact that most of the jobs were in
Israeli-controlled Areas6 and in the construction sector where women's
participation is negligible for both cultural and structural reasons.
Labour-force surveys continue to show that women's wages have remained
consistently below those of men and that wages in the economic sectors
where women were disproportionately represented are below-average.7
44. An increase in household income in 1998 was due to a
real increase in average wages. In 1998, wages could cover an average of
70.5 per cent of basic household needs and 52.2 per cent of total
household expenditures, compared to 63.79 per cent and 46.4 per cent,
respectively, in 1997. However, with the exception of a 4.5-per-cent
increase in education expenditures, due perhaps to the increased
enrolments in more expensive private schools, there was an overall decline
of 2.1 per cent in real household expenditures in 1998.7 It seems that
uncertainty about the future continues to constrain consumer confidence,
resulting in higher levels of forgone consumption. Also, household income
that fails to cover all households needs has negative gender-related
impacts, such as increasing the burden of unpaid work on women.
45. There were considerably fewer comprehensive and
internal closure days imposed by the Israeli authorities on the West Bank
and Gaza during 1998 - a loss of 5.2 per cent of total potential work
days, as compared to a 20.5 per cent loss in 1997 - greatly enhancing
income and productivity.7 However, the severity of the closure policies
continues to manifest itself in both the social and economic spheres.
46. The Special Rapporteur on Palestinian Territories
occupied since 1967, Mr. Hannu Halinen (Finland) noted in his report to
the Commission on Human Rights at its fifty-fifth session, on 20 January
1999, that the number of Palestinian prisoners being detained in Israeli
prisons and detention centres has gone down to 2,200, of whom seven were
women. The issue of Palestinian prisoners who remained in detention, in
violation of articles 49 and 76 of the Fourth Geneva Convention, was a
cause of concern and tension in the occupied territories.8 In Gaza, the
Special Rapporteur met with former detainees and prisoners and was
informed that their wives and children had experienced economic
difficulties because the prisoners were often the sole breadwinners of
their families. Family visits had been few, owing to both frequent
transfer of prisoners in Israel and the difficulty of obtaining a permit
to enter Israel.9
47. According to the report of the Special Rapporteur,
some former prisoners suffered from psychological traumas which affected
their families.10 He suggested that the disturbing phenomenon of domestic
violence in the occupied territories could partly be a consequence of
psychological trauma experienced by former prisoners.
48. The Special Rapporteur reported that there had been
fewer deaths at checkpoints as a result of ambulances being delayed by
permit checks. Two deaths were reported in 1998. One was that of a mother
who did not have a permit to enter Israel who died after childbirth while
waiting at the checkpoint in Hebron. The Rapporteur noted that the Israeli
army admitted that that was a mistake and brought the soldiers before a
military court.11
49. According to the Special Rapporteur, the expansion
of existing Israeli settlements and the building of new ones, as well as
the construction of bypass roads, continued to be a source of great
concern in the occupied territories and to have an effect on the
socio-economic life of Palestinians. For example, the Special Committee to
Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the Human Rights of the
Palestinian People and Other Arabs of the Occupied Territories reported
that on 23 November a Palestinian woman from Hebron was found dead near
the settlement of El-Azar, south of Bethlehem. Palestinian police accused
settlers of her murder.12 The Special Committee also reported an incident
in which a Palestinian woman was attacked by settlers while re-entering
her neighbourhood which had been under closure.13
50. The Special Committee reported that five Palestinian
girls were injured in an incident which took place on 26 November 1998,
involving Palestinian teachers and schoolgirls, Israeli policemen and some
female settlers from Bet-Hadassa. The head teacher stated that female
settlers began shouting at them as they walked by the Jewish settlement.
The confrontation then escalated into a major scuffle. Israeli police were
called in and reported that the students were asked to end their protest
and go back to school. After refusing, a few were detained.14
51. It was also reported by the Special Committee that a
violent confrontation occurred between angry Palestinian stone throwers
and Israeli soldiers on 28 December 1998, following the eviction of two
families at Kifl Harith.15 During the confrontation seven Palestinians and
two soldiers were injured, and 20 women refused to evacuate one family's
house. They were forced out by tear gas fired into the house.
2. Follow-up activities to the Fourth World Conference
on Women
52. Palestine responded to the Secretariat's
questionnaire on the implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action.
53. Following the adoption of the Platform for Action
and in light of regional, Arab and national Palestinian instruments
approved in the preparatory stages of the Conference and the outcome of
the Arab ministerial conference held in Amman in September 1996, work was
carried out at official and grass-roots levels to formulate a national
strategy for Palestinian women, taking into account Palestinian resources
and the priority needs of Palestinian women. As a result of these efforts,
a national strategy for Palestinian women was formulated and announced at
a conference held in June 1997.
54. Organizational mechanisms have been created to
fulfil this goal. At the governmental level, a coordination framework (the
Interministerial Coordination Committee) was formed of representatives
from the women's affairs departments in ministries and State institutions
with a view to promoting the national status of Palestinian women. The
Committee pursues its work in accordance with the Beijing Platform and the
needs and priorities of Palestinian women with a view to translating those
into various activities and programmes.
55. The response of the Palestinian National Authority
to the questionnaire provided comprehensive information on the situation
of women. Based on the priorities of Palestinian women, activities were
undertaken in accordance with the Platform with particular emphasis on the
eight priority areas.
56. According to the report, traditions notwithstanding,
the gender concept is now accepted in Palestinian society and the
stereotypical image of women has begun to change. More education and
employment are now available for women, and their capacity to work and
participate in production and to use modern technologies will grow, thus
strengthening their role and their equality with men in the fundamental
areas of concern discussed in Beijing.
3. Assistance to Palestinian women
57. Information provided by the United Nations system
shows that gender concerns are being increasingly integrated into the
continuing assistance of organizations of the United Nations system to
Palestinian women. This assistance ranges across various areas such as
education, income-generation activities, capacity-building and
institution-building. However, no information was provided in the critical
area of reproductive health.
58. The Office of the United Nations High Commissioner
for Human Rights (OHCHR) supported the establishment of a Women's Human
Rights Unit in a local non-governmental organization which focuses on
legal research and education to improve the status of women in Palestinian
society and the provision of legal aid to both individual women and
women's groups. The Office is also assisting legislators and civil society
organizations in a review of personal status legislation. In addition, it
is participating in the United Nations Gender Task Force, which has
recently been focusing its efforts on the organization of a campaign on
the prevention of violence against women.
59. During the period under review, the Economic and
Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) carried out the following
activities in support of the Palestinian National Authority:
(a) Provision of technical assistance and advisory
services to the National Committee for Palestinian Women for Follow-up to
Beijing in preparation of the Palestinian national report on
implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action;
(b) Preparation of a research paper on gender and
citizenship and the role of non-governmental organizations in the West
Bank and Gaza Strip before and after the peace accords.
60. Since 1994, the World Food Programme (WFP) has been
concentrating its activities in Gaza and the West Bank on poverty
alleviation and social relief, aimed at reaching the most severely
affected populations.
61. In May 1998, the WFP office began a two-year project
which supports the social safety net programme of the Ministry of Social
Affairs, addressing the urgent food security needs of poor households.
About 16,000 very poor households in Gaza and 12,000 in the West Bank are
benefiting from WFP food assistance. Of those, over 65 per cent are headed
by women.
62. This strategy is based on the WFP commitments to
women's advancement (1996-2001) following the Beijing Conference, which
are aimed at reducing gender inequalities. In addition to the social
safety net schemes, WFP has been providing food for the following
gender-related activities in 1998-1999: training of 23 women in social
work; literacy programmes for 754 women in Gaza; training in kitchen
gardening and water recycling for 150 women; training in health care for
85 women; food-for-work for 50 women from low-income households.
63. In addition, to combat the conservative values
limiting opportunities for Palestinian women, the WFP office is organizing
gender-awareness sessions with WFP staff, governmental counterparts, and
non-governmental organization implementing partners.
64. A recent assessment of activities (April 1999) noted
that particular efforts had been made to involve women in all project
activities at the decision-making level and as active beneficiaries.
65. The United Nations Relief and Works Agency for
Palestine Refugees in the Near East (UNRWA) provides essential education,
health and relief and social services to some 3.6 million registered
Palestine refugees in the Agency's area of operations, comprising Jordan,
Lebanon, the Syrian Arab Republic, the West Bank and Gaza Strip.
Assistance to Palestinian women was delivered within the context of the
Agency's regular programmes for Palestinian refugees.66. In the 1998/99
scholastic year, 458,716 pupils were enrolled in Agency preparatory,
elementary, and secondary schools, of whom 228,935, or 49.9 per cent, were
female. Women accounted for 62 per cent of trainees in UNRWA's
technical/semi-professional courses. Of the 866 continuing UNRWA
scholarships in 1998/99, 46 per cent were held by women.
67. UNRWA provided expanded maternal and child health
care and family planning services to Palestine refugees as an integral
part of its primary health care services, in recognition of the fact that
the burden of child and reproductive ill-health falls overwhelmingly on
women in terms of complications in pregnancy and childbirth, infant and
maternal mortality, congenital malformations and disability. With women of
reproductive age and children comprising two thirds of the 3.6 million
registered Palestinian refugees, that investment in maternal and child
health was key for socio-economic development.
68. Difficult socio-economic conditions in refugee
communities during the reporting period continued to create greater
reliance on income earned by women. More than 50 per cent of UNRWA's
special hardship case families, who received direct food and material
assistance from the Agency, were headed by women. UNRWA's
women-in-development programme provided a wide range of social, cultural,
and educational services at the community level. Seventy women's programme
centres served as focal points within the refugee community for UNRWA's
work with women. During the period from June 1998 to July 1999, a total of
20,534 participants benefited from various programme centre activities
such as lectures on health and civil society, legal assistance, childcare,
computer and language skills training, and physical fitness courses. The
programme centres continued to work towards administrative and financial
self-sustainability.
69. During 1998/99, UNRWA's Income Generation Programme
granted loans valued at $1.67 million to 2,612 women who supported 13,060
dependants. Since 1994 the programme has provided loans worth $8.18
million to 11,736 women organized in 1,773 solidarity groups. These women
were granted loans at the end of each successful repayment cycle. The
programme was self-sufficient, with all operational costs and loan loss
provision covered from revenues generated by lending and banking
activities. The programme maintained an annual repayment rate of 99.64
percent.
70. During the reporting period, a total of 1,526 women
benefited from the UNRWA Poverty Alleviation Programme, which provided
small amounts of credit for income-generation projects.
71. In 1996 the United Nations Development Programme
(UNDP) initiated a project to support women's departments within various
ministries to promote gender equality The project aimed to enhance the
capacity of the ministries to mainstream gender and development and to
create gender-sensitive policies, strategies and programmes. The project
was completed in 1998.
72. The sharing of information, coordination of planning
and exchange of experience within the framework of the project have
improved the capacity of the women's departments to impart a gender
perspective into all ministries of the Palestinian National Authority. Due
to UNDP's capacity-building, organizational strengthening and
institutional development efforts, different ministries were subsequently
able to create, formulate and begin to implement their own projects to
meet the needs of their target groups.
73. In order to strengthen the newly established women's
department at the Ministry for Culture, UNDP, in 1998, funded a women's
creative writing and illustrative arts competition. Almost 200 women
participated in the competition, and the winners were honoured in an
official ceremony. The five winning pieces in each category will be
published in 1999 in the form of booklets.
74. In 1999, in an attempt to move away from the welfare
system currently utilized by the Ministry of Social Affairs towards a more
development-oriented approach, UNDP, in cooperation with the women's
department in the Ministry, initiated a poverty alleviation project within
the Ministry to support deprived families and groups, through
income-generating projects and the creation of new job opportunities, with
a special focus on women-headed households. Phase I of the project will
entail the creation of a poverty alleviation centre. During phase II, the
centre will study project proposals from the target groups based on
pre-established criteria which will enable the individuals or groups to
work their way out of poverty.
75. During 1997-1998 UNDP, in cooperation with the
Inter-ministerial Committee for the Advancement of Women, initiated and
succeeded in establishing a one-year pilot project, the Rural Girls
Development Project, in Silt El-Dhaher, Jenin. In 1999, the Project was
implemented in three centres in the West Bank and the Gaza Strip.
76. On the non-governmental level, UNDP supports the
formulation of a gap analysis report on the status of women in the
occupied territories within the framework of the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW). This
initiative is being implemented in cooperation with the Women's Centre for
Legal Aid and Counselling and involves a training symposium for mid-level
and upper-level decision makers from non-governmental as well as
governmental organizations to disseminate information on CEDAW and create
working groups that will be following economic rights, education and
training, family rights, health rights, political participation and
representation, and the eradication of violence against women. The gap
analysis report is expected to be published in March 2000.
77. In an attempt to promote a gender sensitive
educational system, UNDP in 1997 developed a project to assist four
educational non-governmental organizations in elaborating gender-sensitive
curricula addressing the special needs of boys and girls. Teachers have
been trained to develop modules that incorporate gender concerns into the
learning process. During these training sessions a training manual on
gender issues was prepared. Distributed to schools, it is to be used as an
aid in the practical application of a gender perspective in the
classrooms. The project covered public, private and UNRWA schools and
included a community awareness campaign with a variety of reach-out
activities such as a weekly radio programmes for youth addressing gender
issues. It was successfully completed at the end of 1998.
78. UNDP participates actively in the United Nations
Inter-Agency Gender Task Force, which aims to move towards joint Women in
Development/Gender and Development (WID/GAD) programming among United
Nations agencies and to advocate for and support Palestinian partner
institutions to mainstream gender into their policy-making process. In
November 1999, within the framework of the Women's Rights Campaign, UNDP
funded three TV spots on violence against women and a study day
"Poverty and violence".
79. UNIFEM has established the second phase of its
post-Beijing follow-up project with the following objectives: to support
and strengthen permanent institutional women's machinery; to ensure the
integration of gender concerns into the national planning process; and to
consolidate the women's machinery network on the national, regional and
international levels. The project which was initiated in October 1998
endeavours to focus on the three main thematic areas. In each project
country, critical areas of concern have been identified as national
priorities. For the Palestinian territories, they are: legislation,
policies, economics, social dimension, education, health, environment,
media and women under occupation.
80. UNIFEM has also initiated a Women in Development
Facilitation Project which aims to strengthen the capacity of governmental
and non-governmental organizations to follow up on the Platform of Action
by documenting WID/GAD programmes and projects that are being undertaken
in the Palestinian territories by various international and national
governmental and non-governmental organizations. The compiled information
will be widely disseminated to facilitate information exchange on WID/GAD
issues among donors, United Nations agencies, and the Palestinian
Authority, in addition to local and international civil society
organizations, in order to ensure complementation of initiatives and
prevent duplication.
4. Concluding remarks
81. In spite of considerable efforts on the part of the
Palestinian Authority and civil society and by the organizations of the
United Nations system to improve the economic and social conditions of
Palestinian women, their situation still requires special attention. They
still experience unequal access to the labour market and to
income-generating activities. They are also victims of de facto
occupational segregation accompanied by lower wages in the employment
sectors in which they are concentrated.
82. As reflected in previous reports, the status and
living conditions of Palestinian women are closely linked with the
progress of the peace process. The present report shows that women in the
occupied territories continue to be affected in an adverse manner by a
variety of measures, such as closures and settlement activities.
83. The mainstreaming of a gender perspective into
nation-building programmes and the full and equal participation of
Palestinian women are critical to the sustainable outcome of the peace.
With those objectives in mind, organizations of the United Nations system
will continue to assist Palestinian women to increase their capabilities
to participate fully and equally in the peace process and to build and
develop Palestinian society.
B. Release of women and children taken hostage in armed
conflicts and
imprisoned
84. The Commission on the Status of Women, at its
forty-third session, adopted resolution 43/1 on the release of women and
children taken hostage in armed conflicts, including those subsequently
imprisoned. The Commission requested the Secretary-General to prepare,
taking into account the information provided by Member States and relevant
international organizations, a report on the implementation of resolution
43/1 for submission to the Commission on the Status of Women at its
forty-fourth session. In pursuit of that mandate, the Secretary-General
sent a note verbale to all Member States on 17 September 1999. As of 20
November 1999, the Secretariat had received 12 replies, six from
Governments and six from the United Nations system.
85. The Governments of Antigua and Barbuda, Brunei
Darussalam and the United Republic of Tanzania reported that the issue
described in resolution 43/1 was not relevant to them since they were not
involved in any armed conflicts.
86. The Government of Thailand reported that, although
the issue of women and children taken hostage was not relevant to its
context, Thailand had been providing shelter, education and health
services to refugees, displaced persons and asylum seekers from the armed
conflict in neighbouring countries, most of whom were women and children.
87. The Governments of Australia and Norway reported
that they sought to follow-up on the resolution through their involvement
in international activities related to humanitarian issues, preventive
action, peacekeeping and peace-building.
88. The Department of Peacekeeping Operations provided
information from three of its field missions. The United Nations Interim
Force in Lebanon (UNIFIL) reported that four women and three boys under 18
years old and 11 other boys who were under 18 years old at the time of
their arrest continued to be imprisoned in El Khiam prison, operated by
the South Lebanese Army. In a signed affidavit submitted to the High Court
of Justice on 27 September 1999 in response to a petition on behalf of
four of the El Khiam prisoners, Major General Dan Halutz, Head of Israeli
Army Operations, admitted that its General Security Service (Shin Bet)
instructed and paid the interrogators and jailers at El Khiam prison. The
International Committee of the Red Cross (ICRC) is the only organization
that has access to El Khiam prison, but it has yet to make a statement
regarding the conditions in the prison.
89. The United Nations Mission for the Referendum in
Western Sahara (MINURSO) reported that the terms of resolution 43/1,
specifically the reference to hostage-taking, did not appear to have
direct application to cases in the Western Sahara. However, the parties to
the conflict, the Government of Morocco and the Frente Polisario, have
each charged that the other is holding women and/or children hostage.
90. The United Nations Mission in Sierra Leone (UNAMSIL)
reported that the war in Sierra Leone had been characterized by widespread
abduction of civilians, including women and children, by the forces
opposed to the State. In the period prior to the adoption of the Lomé
Peace Accord in July 1999, thousands of civilians were abducted. Estimates
of the number of people in captivity at that time ranged from 12,000 to
20,000. According to UNAMSIL, one indicator of the scale of the problem
was that some 3,000 children were abducted from just one location,
Freetown, the capital city, during a rebel incursion in January 1999.
UNAMSIL also reported that up to 30 per cent of the estimated 15,000 rebel
combatants were children, most of whom had initially been abducted.
Abductees had been used as porters, human shields and for forced sexual
activity.
91. The Lomé Peace Accord stipulates that all abductees
should be released immediately. Within its framework, a committee was
established to facilitate the release programme. The committee is chaired
by the UNAMSIL Chief Military Observer and includes United Nations human
rights officers, representatives of non-governmental organizations, United
Nations agencies, representatives of the parties to the Peace Accord, and,
as an observer, ICRC. UNAMSIL reported that by September 1999, there had
been a disappointing number of less than 500 people released formally. It
also reported that a considerable number of captives had been released
quietly and had slipped back to their homes. However, a large number of
abductees remained in captivity, and the United Nations, through the
committee, had recognized the need for sustained and effective advocacy
and intervention on the matter. UNAMSIL also reported that released
abductees frequently displayed signs of significant physical ill
treatment. Almost all released females reported rape and other forms of
sexual abuse. Many women, when released, were found to be pregnant. In
close cooperation with relevant non-governmental organizations, programmes
are being put in place to assist these persons. Upon release, all children
benefit from care and family-tracing resources made available under the
guidance of UNICEF.
92. In their replies, the Office of the High
Commissioner for Human Rights, the World Food Programme and three regional
commissions (ECA, ECLAC, and ESCWA) did not provide any specific
information on women and children taken hostage.
C. Women, the girl child and human immunodeficiency
virus/acquired
immunodeficiency syndrome
93. In its resolution 43/2, "Women, the girl child
and human immunodeficiency virus/acquired immunodeficiency syndrome",
the Commission on the Status of Women noted the growing proportion of
women becoming infected with HIV in every region, especially in
sub-Saharan Africa and among the younger age groups. The Commission asked
Governments, relevant United Nations agencies, funds and programmes,
intergovernmental and non-governmental organizations, individually and
collectively, to make every effort to place combating HIV/AIDS as a
priority on the development agenda and to implement effective prevention
strategies and programmes. It called upon the international community to
intensify its support of national efforts against HIV/AIDS, particularly
in favour of women and young girls, in the worst hit regions of Africa and
invited the Secretary-General to report to the Commission on the Status of
Women at its forty-fourth session. The Commission urged Governments, with
the assistance of relevant United Nations agencies, funds and programmes,
to adopt a long-term, timely, coherent and integrated AIDS prevention
policy, with public information and education programmes specifically
tailored to the needs of women and girls within their socio-cultural
contexts and sensitivities and specific needs in their life cycle.
94. The present report complements information contained
in other reports before the Commission.16 In its section on health the
report on the review and appraisal of the implementation of the Beijing
Platform for Action, based on replies by Governments, highlights the fact
that many countries have taken action on HIV/AIDS. It also highlights
specific activities of the international community in line with the
resolution. Information on women and HIV/AIDS was requested from the
United Nations system, and replies from the nine entities who had
responded as of 15 December 1999 have been included in the present report.
1. Women and HIV/AIDS
Trends in HIV/AIDS infection of women
95. HIV/AIDS infection rates among women have been
rising steadily, with new information suggesting that there are
significantly more women than men living with HIV infection in sub-Saharan
Africa. Studies conducted in nine different African countries suggest that
between 12 and 13 women are infected for every 10 men. It is estimated
that 12.2 million women and 10.1 million men aged 15-49 were living with
HIV in sub-Saharan Africa at the end of 1999. Women tend to be infected at
a younger age than men for biological and cultural reasons. Girls in
Africa aged 15-19 years are five or six times more likely to be HIV
positive than boys of the same age. The strongest increase worldwide in
infection rates have occurred in the newly independent States of the
former Soviet Union. As the prevalence of sexually transmitted infections
had also increased considerably, the risk of further spread of HIV
infection among the larger population and, in particular, among women was
very high.17
96. Physiological differences in the genital tract
contribute to the higher risk for women of acquiring HIV infection and
sexually transmitted diseases. Gender norms limit women's ability to
determine their level of risk due to ignorance about sex and sexuality,
lower status in society and relationships and economic and social
dependency on male partners. Gender is a decisive factor for people living
with HIV/AIDS, since the burden of care generally falls on female members
of the household. The stigma of living with HIV/AIDS is more painful for
women than men, and the women affected are often victims of violence and
discrimination. Mother-to-child transmission of HIV during pregnancy,
childbirth or breastfeeding is of particular concern. Nine out of 10 of
all HIV-infected babies were born in Africa as a consequence of high
fertility rates combined with high infection rates.
Mainstreaming a gender perspective
97. The urgent need for a more coherent and intensified
United Nations-system response to the pandemic was the rationale for the
creation of the Joint and Co-sponsored United Nations Programme on
HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) in 1996 by its co-sponsoring organizations, the United
Nations Children's Fund (UNICEF), UNDP, the United Nations Population Fund
(UNFPA), the United Nations Educational, Scientific and Cultural
Organization (UNESCO), the World Health Organization (WHO) and the World
Bank. The Programme had increasingly addressed the gender dimension of the
pandemic. Gender-based differences were taken into account in risks and
vulnerability-reduction approaches. UNAIDS was cooperating with women's
networks that undertake advocacy, prevention and offer care and support to
women affected by HIV/AIDS. To focus more specifically on gender issues,
the UNAIDS Inter-Agency Working Group on Gender and AIDS was established
in 1996. It brought together technical experts on gender to act as a
policy advisory body on issues relating to gender and HIV/AIDS. Its role
encompassed joint planning of substantive programmes that address gender
concerns in HIV and development and finding ways in which gender can be
incorporated into all the United Nations programmes and departments
dealing with HIV/AIDS.
98. All of the United Nations entities have provided
support to national efforts against HIV/AIDS, with a focus on gender
issues, including advocacy efforts and policy advice to include the issue
on the national and international agenda. At the regional level, the
Economic Commission for Africa (ECA) addressed HIV/AIDS in the programme
of the 1999 Conference of Ministers of Finance and Ministers of Planning
and Economic Development and at the meeting of the Committee on Women and
Development. It was noted that the sense of urgency in addressing the
HIV/AIDS issue seemed to vary from one African subregion to another.
99. HIV/AIDS was a key issue during the preparatory
process leading up to the special session of the General Assembly for the
review and appraisal of the implementation of the Programme of Action of
the International Conference on Population and Development (1999). A
number of priority areas for further action were adopted relating to the
prevention and treatment of sexually transmitted diseases, including
HIV/AIDS.
100. The World Bank has highlighted the need for
top-level political commitment in terms of protection of women's rights,
an expansion of health and educational facilities that are both physically
accessible and socially acceptable to women, and a wide range of other
multisectoral reforms that would bring about a sustained reduction in the
risk of HIV transmission to women. In close collaboration with other
international organizations, the World Bank has helped to place issues
relating to HIV/AIDS and women on the agenda in a variety of international
forums. The Bank's Economic Development Institute (EDI) and UNAIDS jointly
conducted nine policy seminars for policy makers from 28 African and Asian
countries, focusing on potential intervention strategies in specific
vulnerable sectors.
101. United Nations entities are aware that action at
the national level was crucial and that all means for reaching out to
various groups should be employed. At the country level, HIV/AIDS
prevention activities have been coordinated by the UNAIDS theme groups on
HIV/AIDS. The United Nations system currently has 132 theme groups in over
150 countries, and partnerships are being expanded. Many groups include
representatives from host country Governments, non-governmental and
bilateral organizations and associations of people living with HIV/AIDS.
This has increased understanding of factors influencing risk and
vulnerability and of effective ways to address them.
102. The United Nations Development Fund for Women
(UNIFEM), in close collaboration with UNFPA and UNAIDS, supported a pilot
initiative entitled "Gender-focused responses to address the
challenges of HIV/AIDS". Orientation workshops on gender concerns in
HIV and development were organized for UNIFEM and its partners in six
pilot countries. In the Bahamas, India, Mexico, Senegal, Viet Nam, and
Zimbabwe, partnerships between organizations working on gender and
organizations working on HIV have been formed. Activities have included
community-based data collection on the gender impact of the epidemic;
capacity-building of media personnel in gender, HIV and human rights
concerns; documentation of the abuses of human rights of people living
with HIV/AIDS; and the development of resource materials on how to empower
women to negotiate safe sex. A set of training materials has been
developed which facilitates effective advocacy of gender and AIDS
concerns. Causes and consequences of the epidemic are explored from a
gender perspective which has enabled policy makers and planners to
allocate and plan resources for the prevention of the epidemic in a
gender-responsive manner.
103. With UNESCO's assistance, a comprehensive and
Africa-wide project entitled "Guidance, counselling and youth
development for Africa" was set up to train trainers and youth
workers in guidance and counselling techniques to meet the needs of young
people, particularly girls, as they enter adolescence. UNESCO/UNAIDS
organized a regional workshop on preventive education against HIV/AIDS for
grass-roots women's organizations in Africa (Abidjan, 1998). UNESCO stated
that only a small percentage of the organizations working in the area
asserted that they took gender into account in the preparation and
dissemination of educational messages. To raise their level of risk
awareness, men needed to be encouraged to show greater respect and
protection towards women.
104. The International Labour Organization (ILO)
launched its Preventive AIDS programme in Africa, in collaboration with
UNAIDS, and intends to incorporate more AIDS awareness in private-sector
initiatives. ILO uses existing international instruments like Convention
156, which emphasizes family responsibilities for promoting gender
concerns in HIV/AIDS issues, especially those relating to male
responsibility. It has undertaken studies on the commercial sex sector and
child labour, since those groups are particularly exposed to the
vulnerabilities that promote the spread of the HIV virus and have to cope
with its effects.
2. Specific issues of concern
Promotion of female-controlled methods of prevention and
vaccine development
105. The male condom represents the primary prevention
technology available to protect against HIV infection during sexual
intercourse. Increasing demands to find alternative prevention methods for
women have led to the development of the female condom and research on
vaginal microbicides that offer women more control for the protection of
their reproductive and sexual health. The introduction of combination and
anti-retroviral treatment has become a standard of care in developed
countries and is the most effective treatment available for suppressing
the replication of HIV. It has produced ethical challenges in both
developed and developing countries, where the vast majority of the world's
infected people live without access to new treatments. The development of
vaccines that are inexpensive and easy to administer remains a priority
for developing countries.
106. UNFPA and UNAIDS have been cooperating on condom
distribution requirements through the Global Initiative on Global Health
Commodities. WHO and UNAIDS have been working to ensure that methods
capable of providing dual protection (against pregnancy and sexually
transmitted diseases) were given high priority. An informal consultation,
"Launching and promoting the female condom in Eastern and Southern
Africa" was organized in April 1999 in Pretoria, South Africa.
Participants recommended possible ways forward for the effective,
extensive and timely introduction and promotion of female condoms.
Reducing the price of female condoms by re-using them was seen as a
potentially important strategy; the impact on the safety and efficacy of
the method was being investigated. WHO has been working with UNAIDS in
assisting countries to make female condoms available in the most
appropriate and inexpensive way, working with social marketing
organizations, the manufacturer and governmental and non-governmental
organizations. Involving and targeting men was seen as crucial in order
for the product to be useful and acceptable, as social marketing
experiences in Zambia and Zimbabwe showed. The two agencies have been
developing a planning and programming guide for the female condom, which
would be available early in 2000. UNAIDS and WHO were also involved in
promoting the development of a microbicide, which could be an empowering
tool, reducing women's social susceptibilities to the epidemic. The
results have not been very encouraging, since pharmaceutical companies
have not assisted in making the drug available to large parts of the
developing countries.
107. The World Bank has been implementing a number of
projects to increase the prevalence of modern methods of contraception and
to slow the spread of HIV infection by both promoting behavioural and
social change and increasing the facilities designed to treat sexually
transmitted diseases among women and men in Burkina Faso, Chad and Kenya.
Programme activities are designed to encourage women to recognize and seek
treatment for sexually transmitted diseases.
Mother-to-child transmission and care of children
orphaned by AIDS
108. Mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of HIV during
pregnancy, childbirth or breastfeeding is of particular concern. Nine out
of 10 of all HIV-infected babies in Africa are born as a consequence of
high infection rates. Mother-to-child transmission of HIV is eroding
improvements in child survival in several of the most affected countries
in Africa south of the Sahara. The care of and support for children
orphaned by AIDS has increasingly come to the centre of attention and was
the topic of the International World AIDS Day, 1999.
109. The immediate challenge is to reduce the
transmission of HIV from mother to child, while at the same time reducing
the overall number of infected women of reproductive age. HIV is acquired
by the infant from the mother around the time of birth or through
breastfeeding. Interventions such as anti-retroviral drugs, caesarian
sections and alternative feeding options can significantly reduce the rate
of transmission. Where the financial resources and technical
infrastructure exist and where HIV testing can determine a pregnant
woman's seropositive status, these interventions have brought
mother-to-child transmission of HIV under reasonable levels of control.
The use of different short-course anti-retroviral regimens given during
labour and for one week postpartum have been demonstrated to reduce
significantly mother-to-child transmission.
110. The mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) InterAgency
Task Team, a joint UNICEF/WHO/UNAIDS/
UNFPA initiative on prevention of mother-to-child
transmission of HIV/AIDS, was established in 1998. Projects were being
carried out on a pilot basis in nine countries (Botswana, Burkina Faso,
Côte d'Ivoire, Kenya, Rwanda, United Republic of Tanzania, Uganda,
Zambia, Zimbabwe). Measures for an integrated approach to significantly
reduce mother-to-child transmission would include increased access to
voluntary counselling and HIV testing, greater knowledge of men and women
about their seropositive status, strong reinforcement of prevention
messages by allowing people to act on the basis of their test results,
expansion and strengthening of family planning information and services,
early access to quality antenatal care with trained health and social
workers, voluntary counselling, and HIV testing for women and their
partners. Furthermore, it would include provision of anti-retroviral
medication to prevent HIV transmission from seropositive women to their
babies, improved care during labour, delivery and the postpartum period,
counselling for HIV positive women on infant feeding choices, making
replacement feeding available when needed and supporting women in their
choice of feeding. The opportunity for promoting behavioural change
through services related to pregnancy and delivery, the only entry point
for service provision for many women in developing countries, should not
be lost.
111. Specific activities on orphans has been carried out
by several United Nations entities. FAO produced a report on rural
children living in farm systems affected by HIV/AIDS. Farm households and
extended families readily take in orphan children, but assistance provided
by households and communities collapses when the increase in demand and
numbers becomes unmanageable. UNICEF undertook various activities to care
for orphans and provide skills that would help them avoid being legally or
sexually exploited. The current decline in official development assistance
(ODA) is threatening assistance to the children victims of the HIV/AIDS
epidemic. At the International Day for the Eradication of Poverty, 15
October 1999, UNESCO launched an appeal to individuals, the business
sector, non-governmental organizations, foundations, agencies and others
to contribute to the welfare of children orphaned by AIDS so that they
could receive food and shelter, good health care and education. Violence
against women affecting the health of women and girls
112. Steps have been taken to change harmful traditions
and practices affecting the health of women and girls and to eliminate all
forms of violence against women, which was identified as one of the root
causes of HIV infection (A/54/341). Gender-based violence threatens sexual
and reproductive health and greatly increases women's and girls'
vulnerability to HIV/AIDS. The interplay between victimization and HIV
infection is becoming increasingly evident and needs to be addressed
through programmes that provide women with access to resources,
capacity-building and empowerment and health services, in particular in
the area of reproductive and sexual health care.
113. WHO is supporting a multicountry study on the
prevalence, risk and protective factors and health consequences of
violence against women. The study, currently under way in Bangladesh,
Brazil, Namibia, Peru, the Philippines, United Republic of Tanzania and
Thailand, is collecting data with a core protocol and using research teams
that include at least one organization working with women experiencing
violence. The results of the study, to be available in 2001, will provide
comparative data for the first time on which to base intervention and
prevention strategies.
114. The World Food Programme (WFP) has cooperated with
organizations that provide women and girls with a safety net when they are
vulnerable to risk of violence and HIV/AIDS infection. WFP has provided
food to two institutions in Cambodia which rescue girls at risk of
HIV/AIDS and offers skills and empowerment training so that they can have
a source of income other than prostitution. UNESCO reported that funding
had been approved to launch a two-year inter-agency project (UNDP, UNESCO,
UNICEF, UNIFEM, UNFPA and WHO) on the eradication of female genital
mutilation in Kenya.
Sexual and reproductive health education for young
people, particularly girls
115. Given the high infection rate among young women,
particularly among girls, special efforts were made by the United Nations
entities to improve prevention and raise awareness. The overall objective
was to provide women and girls with the required awareness and skills to
tackle HIV and reduce the current rate of HIV transmission and sexually
transmitted diseases.
116. UNESCO developed a programme for preventive
education and communication which had been especially designed for
societies in which men traditionally have the dominant role and women have
little control over their own sexual behaviour and reproductive
capacities. A series of regional seminars were organized for decision
makers from the education sector. Specialists and teachers in China and
Thailand participated in a regional workshop on the prevention of HIV/AIDS
and drug abuse by improving the quality of curricula and teachers,
organized by UNESCO and UNDCP (Beijing, 1997). UNESCO/UNAIDS held a
regional workshop on preventive education against HIV/AIDS for grass-roots
women's organizations in Abidjan, Côte d'Ivoire, for 17 countries in
sub-Saharan Africa. UNAIDS has been funding the UNESCO project on HIV/AIDS
preventive education and health education for adolescents, particularly
girls at high risk, in Chile.
117. The UNAIDS interregional project on the integration
of sexually transmitted diseases and HIV prevention activities into
reproductive health programmes at the primary health-care level comprises
activities such as HIV/AIDS prevention training and gender-sensitive
counselling skills for health information and service providers, including
medical doctors, midwives, nurses, community health workers,
psychologists, social workers, peer educators, counsellors and other
groups that serve as multiplier agents for dissemination of information
regarding HIV/AIDS prevention.
118. UNICEF is carrying out a project on integrating
gender awareness into adolescent sexual health programmes, implemented by
the Commonwealth Secretariat. The project has two phases: the development
of an outline and a review with young people; and the pretesting of the
educational materials and preparation of a guidebook.
119. Although it had no mandate to intervene directly on
HIV/AIDS, the World Food Programme (WFP) has taken an active role in
empowering women and educating girls so that they will be more aware of
their rights and better informed about the dangers of HIV/AIDS. Activities
include a vulnerable group development programme in Bangladesh and a pilot
programme of take-home rations for girls in primary school in Benin, where
enrolment increased - in one case by 280 per cent - after WFP gave food as
an incentive to girls.
Support for women living with HIV/AIDS
120. Women and girls living with HIV/AIDS are often
stigmatized and victims of violence and discrimination. The Commission on
the Status of Women urged the creation of an environment that promotes
compassion and support for those infected with HIV and the provision of a
legal framework that would protect the rights of people living with
HIV/AIDS. Various forms of support have been provided. The ECA African
Centre for Women offers economic activities empowering women so that they
can cope with the causes and consequences of the epidemic.
121. WHO and UNAIDS supported a project to explore the
impact of HIV/AIDS on HIV-positive women's reproductive health and rights,
focusing on women's experiences of the health service. Coordinated by the
International Community of Women Living with HIV/AIDS (ICW), the
participatory research project, carried out by HIV-positive women who are
also the subject of the study, was being conducted in Thailand and
Zimbabwe over 18 months. The results will be available in 2001. The
project hopes to provide policy recommendations on measures to be taken to
protect HIV-positive women from gender discrimination and to promote
improvements in programmes and policies.
3. Conclusions
Good practices
122. The United Nations entities recognize that, for
expanding the quality and scope of engendered HIV/AIDS strategies and
interventions and thus for programme replicability, it is crucial to
identify, promote and apply "best practices" in reducing both
the risk and vulnerability of women and girls. One "best
practice" is the innovative pilot project co-sponsored by UNIFEM,
UNAIDS, and UNFPA on gender-focused responses to address the challenges of
HIV/AIDS. The project was launched to address the challenge of HIV/AIDS in
six countries (Bahamas, India, Mexico, Senegal, Thailand, and Zimbabwe).
It aims at strengthening the capacity of women's organizations to
recognize HIV/AIDS as a critical gender issue and to address it through a
variety of initiatives. UNESCO is striving to reinforce the capacity of
local facilitators in raising awareness, identifying examples of
"best practice" concerning HIV/AIDS preventive education and
proposing the compilation of strategies and research on the transfer of
gender-sensitive health messages to illiterate and semi-illiterate people.
123. In its meeting held in June 1999, the UNAIDS
Inter-Agency Working Group on Gender changed its modality of supporting
individual initiatives through its members and instead evolved a unified
work plan whereby it will develop a generic advocacy document/technical
guide that will assist member agencies in the implementation of a
programme/project in a particular country.
Further suggested activities
124. A gender-based response to the HIV/AIDS epidemic
requires continued efforts, coordination and commitment over the long term
at the country, regional and global levels within the framework of the
United Nations system strategic plan for HIV/AIDS for 2001-2005 and within
the work of the UNAIDS Inter-Agency Working Group on Gender. The new
International Partnership Against AIDS in Africa, launched in January 1999
by the UNAIDS co-sponsors and secretariat must be given the highest
priority, since more than half of current HIV/AIDS global infections are
found in that continent.
125. Strategies should focus on improving women's
control over their reproductive health, because there is clinical evidence
that infections of the reproductive tract and sexually transmitted
diseases substantially increase the risk of HIV transmission.
126. Access to voluntary testing and counselling for men
and women should be promoted.
127. The development of advocacy activities, including
advocacy kits targeted at governmental officials and policy makers; senior
health managers; religious, community, women and youth leaders;
journalists and others is necessary in order to advance legal and policy
reform concerning HIV/AIDS prevention and treatment. Special emphasis
should be put on the impact of the epidemic on girls and women.
128. Vaccine development, promotion of female controlled
methods of prevention and measures to decrease mother-to-child
transmission of HIV/AIDS infection need to be reinforced.
-------------------
Notes
1 See Report of the Fourth World Conference on Women,
Beijing, 4-15 September 1995 (United Nations publication, Sales No.
E.96.IV.13), chap. I, resolution I, annexes I and II.
2 Official Records of the General Assembly, Fifty-third
Session, Supplement No. 16 (A/53/16), part two, chap. II, para. 20.
3 Ibid., Fifty-fourth Session, Supplement No. 6
(A/54/6/Rev.1), vol. I, paras. 44-49.
4 See E/CN.6/1999/2 and A/54/264.
5 UNSCO Report on Economic and Social Conditions in the
West Bank and Gaza Strip (spring 1999), issued by the Office of the
Special Coordinator in the Occupied Territories (Gaza, 30 April 1999).
6 According to the 1999 UNSCO report, Israeli-controlled
areas included Israel, Israeli settlements and industrial zones in the
occupied territories.
7 According to the Palestinian Central Bureau of
Statistics, and cited in the 1999 UNSCO report.
8 "Report on the situation of human rights in the
Palestinian territories occupied since 1967, submitted by Mr. Hannu
Halinen, Special Rapporteur, pursuant to Commission on Human Rights
resolution 1993/2 A" (E/CN.4/1999/24), para. 28.
9 Ibid., para. 29.
10 Ibid., para. 36.
11 Ibid., para. 46.
12 Note by the Secretary-General transmitting the report
of the Special Committee to Investigate Israeli Practices Affecting the
Human Rights of the Palestinian People and Other Arabs of the Occupied
Territories (A/54/73), para. 148.
13 Ibid., para 173.
14 Ibid., para. 150.
15 Ibid., para. 171.
16 "Review and appraisal of the Beijing Declaration
and Platform for Action" (E/CN.6/2000/PC.2); "Final assessment
of the system-wide medium-term plan for the Advancement of Women"
(E/CN.6/2000/3).
17 UNAIDS/WHO, Global AIDS Epidemic Up-date: December
1999 (Geneva).