1. Introduction
1. René Cassin declared “There
will be no peace on this planet for as long as human rights are
violated anywhere in the world”. The co-author of the Universal
Declaration of Human Rights insisted that there can be no peace
without justice.
2. The motion for a resolution at the origin of the present report
begins by stating that progress towards gender equality in Europe
has been “slow and uneven” and that zones of enduring conflict are
particular obstacles to this progress. Gender equality overall is
indeed a long time coming, and recent developments in Europe have
even demonstrated a trend towards backlash where women’s social,
economic and political rights are challenged by authoritarian states
– in Belarus and in the Russian Federation, for example, but not
only there. In situations of tension and conflict, women’s rights
are put under particular threat.
3. The motion also recalls the proven links between conflict,
gender inequality and violence against women. It is a fact that
war, conflict and tensions exacerbate gendered behaviours which
are highly damaging to women, as well as broader hostile attitudes
to minority groups. Already widespread in peacetime Europe, violence
against women is an even more serious phenomenon in times of conflict,
where intimidation, sexual violence and gender-based violence are
used as tools for repression, and where women have for centuries been
seen as an “easy target”.
4. The Russian Federation’s new aggression against my country,
Ukraine, began on 24 February 2022, just as I was returning from
my fact-finding mission to The Hague on 21 and 22 February, and
is providing brutal evidence of the atrocities war inflicts on all
civilian populations, increasingly, systematically and indiscriminately.
The war raises many issues about women’s vulnerabilities, but also
about their empowerment and their ability to change the course of
events when given the opportunities to act and to speak out. It
has also made more visible the absence of women around the negotiating
table, despite their status as victims, stakeholders, advocates,
and as national and international legislators.
5. After conflicts cease or recede, transitional justice aims
to accompany regime change away from the environments that gave
rise to violent repression. It depends on the ability to bring to
account the perpetrators of crimes committed during conflict, ensuring
that time, “voluntary amnesia” and the regime change itself do not
exonerate from crimes committed, for which reparation must be found
if lasting peace is to be achieved. These legal procedures are a
necessary part of peace and reconciliation processes, and women
as the first victims must play a key role at all stages of these
processes.
6. This report endeavours to give an overview of the situation
in today’s Europe with respect to justice and security for women
during and after conflicts, and to make recommendations on how women
can be better protected during conflicts, more involved in peace
negotiations, and better represented during transitional justice
proceedings. Women must be empowered to play a greater role at all
levels, including within the highest decision-making bodies, in
creating the conditions for peaceful reconciliation and future co-existence.
For this to happen, discrimination against women and girls in post-conflict
societies must end, good practices in the field must be shared and
implemented, and women and men must work together to end discrimination
as a means of avoiding and averting conflict.
2. A brief (UN) history of the fight for
women's role in peace and security
7. The United Nations, and specifically
UN Women, with its Justice and Security section, has set out the conditions
for women's place in peace and reconciliation in its resolutions
and guidelines, and worked on the ground in all the countries affected
by conflict globally. This work, and its articulation around the
UN's Sustainable Development Goals, in particular Goal 5 “achieve
gender equality and empower all women and girls”,
form a reliable benchmark and guide
for the Parliamentary Assembly's approach to the issue.
8. Article 27 of the Geneva Convention relative to the Protection
of Civilian Persons in Time of War of 1949, and the Additional Protocols
of 1977, provide that women shall be especially protected against
any attack on their honour, in particular against rape, enforced
prostitution, or any form of indecent assault.
9. The UN’s Fourth World Conference on Women adopted the 1995
Beijing Platform for Action as a roadmap for achieving peaceful
and inclusive societies, with gender equality as a central priority.
“Women and armed conflict” is one of the Platform's strategic objectives:
the Beijing Declaration states that “an environment that maintains
world peace and promotes and protects human rights, democracy and
the peaceful settlement of disputes, in accordance with the principles
of non-threat or use of force against territorial integrity or political independence
[…] is an important factor for the advancement of women.”
10. The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
endorsed the inherent ties between
gender equality, sustainable development and peace. In 2015, UN
Security Council Resolution 2250 on youth, peace and security
stressed that “youth should actively
be engaged in shaping lasting peace and contributing to justice and
reconciliation”.
2.1. United
Nations Security Council Resolution 1325 and its implementation
in member States
11. The landmark UN Security Council
Resolution 1325 on women, peace and security was adopted in 2000 as
an instrument to promote the involvement of women in every stage
of conflict resolution and ensure their equal participation in the
promotion of peace and security. It also aims to provide women with
better protection during armed conflicts. The implementation of
this resolution was made possible by the creation of an Interagency
Task Force on women, peace and security, responsible for setting
out National Action Plans (NAPs). Each country has a different action
plan focusing on different subjects according to the most urgent issues
in the territory.
12. NAPs outline governmental measures for implementing the Women,
Peace and Security Agenda. They outline objectives and activities
on domestic and international levels to secure the human rights
of women and girls in conflict settings; prevent armed conflict
and violence, including against women and girls; and ensure the
meaningful participation of women in peace and security. Over 80
countries have developed NAPs, some have developed second, third,
and even fourth-generation NAPs, building on the work and lessons
learned from previous plans. Frequently, NAPs are aligned with national
development agendas, gender equality policies, and other relevant
policy frameworks.
13. NAPs vary a great deal in terms of focus, timeline, content,
budget, and monitoring and evaluation frameworks. Some are also
developed at regional and local levels. During my fact-finding visit
to the Hague, I had a meeting with the members of the Oversight
Board of the Netherlands National Action Plan for Resolution 1325.
This country’s model for implementing and monitoring the progress
with the action plan is exemplary, in particular with regard to
co-operation between the authorities and civil society.
2.2. United
Nations Security Council Resolution 1820 on sexual violence as a
weapon of war
14. In 2008, the UN Security Council
adopted a second resolution, Resolution 1820 on sexual violence
as a weapon of war. In relation to the subject of this report, while
denouncing sexual violence as a tactic of war, the resolution also
conveys concerns “about the persistent obstacles and challenges
to women’s participation and full involvement in the prevention
and resolution of conflicts as a result of violence, intimidation
and discrimination, which erode women’s capacity and legitimacy
to participate in post-conflict public life, and acknowledging the
negative impact this has on durable peace, security and reconciliation,
including post-conflict peacebuilding.” This statement has particular
resonance when looking at all recent conflicts, as it expresses
in few words the inhibited potential of women in many conflict-related
circumstances, perhaps most of all when considering the recent plight
of women in Afghanistan after the return of the Taliban, following
years of women’s gradual and measurable, if limited, empowerment.
The resolution also calls on the UN bodies themselves to “invite
women to participate in discussions pertinent to the prevention
and resolution of conflict, the maintenance of peace and security,
and post-conflict peacebuilding, and encourages all parties to such talks
to facilitate the equal and full participation of women at decision-making
levels.”
15. Just as rape – and other forms of sexual violence – were used
in the Balkans, and since then in Syria, the patterns are repeated
today in Ukraine, as the increasing number of reports have been
testifying since the Kremlin’s invasion of its neighbour on 24 February
2022. As Russian troops have withdrawn from towns and suburbs around
the capital, women and girls have come to the police, media and
human rights organisations to tell the story of the horrors they
have experienced at the hands of Russian soldiers. Rape and sexual
assault are war crimes and a breach of international humanitarian
law, and both Ukraine’s Prosecutor General and the International
Criminal Court have said they will open investigations into reported
sexual violence. Truth and justice will be all the more important
for these cases, as sexual violence leaves trauma that is very difficult
to heal.
2.3. UN
Women’s contribution to the Women, Peace and Security agenda
16. In 2020 a new Compact on Women,
Peace and Security and Humanitarian Action was adopted, promoted
in particular during UN Women’s Generation Equality Forum hosted
by France and Mexico. The five-year compact is based on five pillars:
financing the Women, Peace and Security agenda and gender equality in
humanitarian programming; women's meaningful participation in peace
processes; women's economic security, access to resources and other
essential services; women's leadership and agency across peace, security
and humanitarian sectors; and protection of women in conflict and
crisis contexts, including women human rights defenders.
True to the inclusive working methods
of UN women, the compact currently counts 161 signatories, including
governments, civil society organisations and networks, UN Entities,
academic institutions, the private sector, youth organizations and
networks and international or regional organisations. Much of the
action in this framework is directed towards regions outside of
Europe, notably Africa. Nevertheless, on the one hand European actors
are both partners and beneficiaries of the compact and on the other,
peace cannot be achieved anywhere in the world without this global
approach.
17. UN Women was created in 2010 as an independent UN entity,
and as such its action is almost totally reliant (98%) on voluntary
contributions, and in the words of the organisation itself, “Generally
speaking, political support has only been modestly and partly translated
into financial support”.
Member States must make more effort
to ensure sustainable resources.
3. The
Council of Europe’s Istanbul Convention and the role of women in
conflicts
18. The Convention on preventing
and combating violence against women and domestic violence (
CETS No.
210, “Istanbul Convention”) states in the preamble the need to pay particular attention
to the violations of the human rights of women during conflicts,
and the particular threats they face even after conflicts. The Council
of Europe has always worked to establish peaceful dialogue between
member States and to alleviate tensions, but its conventional
acquis is
realistic as it contains provisions for human rights protection
in all situations, including conflict. The Istanbul Convention therefore
states clearly that it should apply in times of peace and in situations
of armed conflict alike.
19. The Istanbul Convention should thus be upheld and implemented
at all times. It also promotes the importance of education for men
and women on stereotypical gender roles, as well as on non-violent
conflict resolution. This type of education which should be provided
in both formal and informal institutions and is crucial to ensuring
that successive generations are aware of the history behind the
positions women hold nowadays, as well as to understanding the need
for their continued empowerment.
20. The new report in preparation in the Committee on Equality
and Non-Discrimination on the Istanbul Convention
will
address the role of the Assembly and of national parliaments in
the promotion and supervision of the implementation of the convention,
and will certainly raise the issues of how and to what extent the
treaty ensures protection against, and prevention of rape and sexual
violence during conflict, as well as protection of women and girls
who are refugees, who are covered by the text.
21. In 2010, the Committee of Ministers of the Council of Europe
adopted Recommendation
CM/Rec(2010)10 on the role of women and men in conflict prevention
and resolution and in peace building”,
stating
at the outset that “women, compared to men, have less access to
resources, power and decision making before, during and after conflicts”.
This is an important text and should be recalled in the present
context. Although the title applies to “women and men”, its whole
thrust concerns issues of (in)equality between women and men and
the need to acknowledge, take into account and rectify inequalities
as a precondition for conflict resolution, so empowering women is
the main objective. I believe that the Committee of Ministers should
review this subject, and that it is time for a new recommendation
to be prepared and adopted on women, peace and security, in the
light of recent events in the dozen years since its adoption.
4. Scope,
working methods and aims of the report
22. The report covers three main
issues – the particular dangers and violence confronted by women
during conflict, the role of women in preventing and ending conflict
and women’s contribution to reconciliation and transitional justice.
These areas may be seen as a chronological chain of events, which
is useful in particular for the purposes of examining separately
conflict prevention and post-conflict situations and needs. However, all
the experts I exchanged with on this topic
underlined
that to have any chance of success, the “later” stages of peace
negotiation and plans for post-conflict peacebuilding must in fact
be built into action and policies as soon as conflict breaks out.
23. I therefore believe that conflict prevention and peace negotiation
should form a continuum, where the possibility of war is taken into
account during prevention phases, and the foundations and nature
of future efforts to avert conflict taken into account for peace
talks during conflict. This would also ensure better involvement
of women in negotiations, as they are the most active in prevention
at individual, local, regional and national levels. My own experience
is revealing, right here and now, that peace talks and reconciliation plans
can also run parallel to necessary action of retaliation and defence,
including armed intervention. When a country is the victim of armed
aggression, peace building and peace talks cannot subsist alone
but are a beacon for the future and an added incentive to end conflict
as rapidly as possible.
24. The first objective of the report is to promote the role of
women in preventing and resolving conflicts. From initial research,
it was my conviction that most peace agreements lacked provisions
on the priorities of women and girls and their security and did
not reflect women's perspectives on their lives and communities. This
premise has revealed itself to be largely true, so this is a recommendation
I have made in the present report.
25. The UN Secretary General’s 2018 six priorities for women in
peace processes provided guidelines for further recommendations
and helped to orient the main areas for attention. They are the
following:
- ensure women are
decision makers in economic recovery processes;
- protect women human rights defenders and civil society
in conflict situations;
- boost financing for women, peace and security;
- put more women in uniform in UN police and peacekeeping
operations;
- guarantee women’s meaningful participation in peace processes;
- generate and make available more data, evidence and analysis
on women, conflict and peace.
26. This report looks at particular “moments” in conflict and
post-conflict processes. The most interesting region for an analysis
of a post-conflict situation is the Balkans, in particular the countries
of Serbia, Croatia and Bosnia and Herzegovina, as well as Kosovo*.
Here the conflict ended
in the early 2000s, but society is still affected by its aftermath
and trauma remains, despite much positive action. There are also
worrying signs of resurgence of the nationalistic tendencies that
caused war (celebration of “war heroes”, etc.). The post-soviet region
of eastern Europe was my other intended focus, and I meant to explore
the ways in which women were part of peace building processes and
conflict resolution, as well as being a force for political change
in Ukraine. Unfortunately, the situation has changed dramatically
since I began my research, and war has completely overshadowed this
part of the world, very nearly obliterating all the efforts to build
(and rebuild) peaceful societies, demonstrating the shortfalls and
obstacles to lasting peace and reconciliation.
27. In the preparation of this report, I organised a hearing on
15 March 2021 with the participation of Mr Fabián Salvioli, Special
Rapporteur on the promotion of truth, justice, reparation and guarantees
of non-recurrence with the Office of the UN High Commissioner for
Human Rights, and Mr Kevin Schumacher, Deputy Executive Director
of the Women for Afghan Women Organisation. I held an online round
table on 21 May 2021 with civil society organisations working with
women in the Balkans.
28. I also carried out a fact-finding visit to The Hague on 21-22
February 2022 on the eve of the outbreak of the war in my country,
with the aim of finding out more about women's role in the three
stages of conflict I have identified: peace-building as part of
conflict prevention when tensions rise before conflict breaks out;
women's specific risks and vulnerabilities during conflict, as well
as their protection; and the need for women to have an equal place
and voice in peace negotiations and post-conflict situations. This
mission provided very substantial input to my report, in particular
in relation to the need for recognition of victims and prosecution
of criminals in order for post-conflict reconciliation to be meaningful,
or even possible. I take this opportunity to thank the Netherlands
delegation to the Assembly for their assistance, and to thank our
colleague Petra Stienen for receiving me at the Senate and for organising
a working dinner.
5. Case
study: peace and reconciliation in the Balkans, over two decades
after the conflict
29. The countries of former Yugoslavia
went through one of the deadliest conflicts in Europe since World War
II – until today. Women suffered the worst consequences; rape was
used as a weapon of “ethnic cleansing” with indicative numbers of
women victims of rape estimated at between 20 000 and 50 000. Yet
in the reconstruction women’s voices were only rarely heard, and
the assistance given by governments and international agencies,
focusing on soldier’s social reintegration, often did not pay sufficient
attention to the position of women. The following insight into this
region was provided during the online round table held on 21 May
2021 hosted by the Belgrade Office of the Council of Europe. I would
like to thank the Head of the Office, Mr Tobias Flessenkemper, for
his excellent guidance in its organisation.
5.1. Women
working for and with women
30. Ms Nina Popovic, from the Human
Rights House in Zagreb (B.A.B.E), Ms Emina Bošnjak from Sarajevo Open
Centre and Ms Sonja Stojanović Gajić from the Belgrade Centre for
Security Policy, represented civil society organisations in Croatia,
Bosnia and Herzegovina and Serbia. In a second part of the proceedings, taking
a broader view of regional developments I spoke with Ms Denisa Kostovicova
from the London School of Economics and Political Science (LSE)
and to Mr Thomas Osorio, from the Faculty of Social Sciences of Leuven
University.
31. The B.aB.e, NGO was founded in the midst of the Balkan conflict
in 1994 to provide protection for women’s human rights. Located
in Zagreb with an antenna in Vukovar, B.aB.e. is publicly recognised
for “the uncompromising struggle for the respect of human rights
on an equal basis to all citizens, and for its commitment in advocating
gender equality.” Much of the work now consists in organising workshops,
lobbying decision makers and working towards a more cohesive and
peaceful society. The NGO also provides shelters for women and children
and runs a helpline.
32. Most of the initiatives to re-build a peaceful society came
from actors in the non-governmental sectors and in culture and arts.
The people involved in these initiatives were predominantly female:
either women's organisations working in the framework of UN Security
Council Resolution 1325-related activities, or on addressing sexual
and wartime violence, or high-profile artists such as Jasmila Žbanić.
An emblematic
and high-profile current case was the legal battle of Fata Orlović
against the Republika Srpska institutions, because an orthodox church
was built illegally on her property that she had to leave because
of the war. The case had been going on for 20 years.
5.2. Cross-border
relations, from weakened links to co-operation
33. With respect to social inclusion
in Bosnia and Herzegovina, the 2020 National Human Development Report
showed that social connections across ethnicities had weakened over
the past decade. In 2019, 70% of Bosnian respondents reported having
no Serb friends, whereas only 55 % of Bosnian respondents reported having
none in 2009. Similarly, 49 % of Serb respondents reported having
no Bosnian friends in 2009 whereas in 2019 this proportion had increased
to 72 %. The ethnic-based political structures created by the Dayton Accord
had become a mechanism for increasing isolation among the constituent
peoples of Bosnia and Herzegovina and for separating them into administrative
systems and social spaces. These negative trends pointed to the
fact that as time passes it will become progressively harder to
work on peace and reconciliation without serious institutional and
political action.
34. Nevertheless, peer support and co-operation worked well, in
particular across national borders (between Serbia and Bosnia and
Herzegovina, for instance). The ratification of the Istanbul Convention
by all three countries (Bosnia and Herzegovina, Croatia, Serbia) had
allowed for indicators of its implementation to be established,
and NGO networks were able to work together using the provisions
of the convention. EU funding had also helped civil society to consolidate
and further its positive action. On the other hand, instrumentalisation
by nationalist parties was widespread and there was no regulation
or sanctions imposed on genocide negating rhetoric. There was a
great need for efforts to ensure that public language was based
on truth about the past.
5.3. Lasting
effects and resurgence of non-resolved trauma
35. In all three Balkan countries,
violence against women increased after the war in the region. According
to LSE’s Denisa Kostovicova: “when war stops, violence does not
stop”. Despite some difficulty in compiling statistics, it was clear
that gender-based violence in general, already higher in the region,
had been exacerbated by the economic recession, the recent natural
disasters (earthquakes) in Croatia and the Covid-19 pandemic, all
against a backdrop of persisting problems of “unfinished peace”
and brain-drain. In Kosovo*, inter-ethnic cleansing during the war
had given way to inter-family violence (including feminicide) in
the post-conflict period. Women were also becoming victims of violence
at an increasingly younger age.
36. Several phenomena could be observed over time: for instance,
women who had been victims of violence during the war had spent
the last two decades caring for their families, often in the absence
of men killed during the war, and only now were coming forward to
tell their stories and claim justice. There was also much transgenerational
trauma, in families where children witnessed violence at a very
young age.
37. Director of the Sarajevo Open Centre Emina Bošnjak described
the situation in Bosnia and Herzegovina 25 years after the end of
the war: the country had not really begun the institutional process
of dealing with the past. War criminals were celebrated publicly
and openly, and divisions fostered. The institutional environment, further
hampered by the Covid-19 pandemic, had reduced peace-building processes
to a minimum, and the perpetuation of weak governments made progress
difficult. The continued impunity of war criminals was also a serious
obstacle to lasting peace.
38. Leuven University’s Thomas Osorio also observed a downturn
in governance across the region, which he currently estimated at
the lowest level since the war. Backsliding, lack of true change
and mounting nationalism were characteristics. There was also what
he termed as a “hijacking of moralisation”, translated into very
divergent positions about heroes and victims, which made the commemoration
of any single group’s suffering very difficult. The denial of war
crimes was a very serious matter.
39. In this context I drew the attention of the Committee on Equality
and Non-Discrimination to the need to recognise and establish the
facts about gender-based violence in conflict at an exchange of
views on this report. In 2021 the Ukrainian NGO “Media initiative”
conducted 12 interviews with women who had been captives in the
Russian occupied parts of Donbas (the self proclaimed republics
of Donetsk and Luhansk).
According to them, 301 people, out
of them 31 women are kept in detentions or imprisoned as “spies”, constantly
tortured and intimidated by both the staff of the “penitentiaries”
and by other imprisoned persons. Since 2017, all “court hearings”
had been conducted in a closed area without any access for relatives
or the media. Women are sentenced to long-term imprisonment for
“espionage activities” and kept in dire conditions in the “Snezhnoye”
women’s prison, which was initially designed for criminals having
committed serious crimes.
5.4. Women’s
dynamic participation as a deterrent
40. Ms Kostovicova reported on
the studies she had carried out on the Croatian Parliament, where
women were a minority and marginalised, but were more vocal than
men, in particular on the subject of transitional justice. Parliaments
have a reputation for being “masculine”, adversarial forums, Croatian
women parliamentarians had shown themselves to be just as adversarial
as men, setting agendas and crossing party lines in the interest
of progress. The same type of study was under way for Serbia. One
of her conclusions was that a positive dynamic during peacetime
was essential in minimising the effects of conflict.
41. Women who survived wartime sexual violence and other forms
of torture still faced numerous administrative and legal barriers
in obtaining justice, and social support and benefits were disproportionately lower
for the survivors entitled to them in Republika Srpska, for instance.
Women who survived torture and who sought compensations through
civil lawsuits faced discrimination and social stigma. There were,
however, some positive outcomes: in 2015, the Court of Bosnia and
Herzegovina took an unprecedented series of decisions to compensate
wartime survivors in several criminal cases under prosecution. To
date, 15 final decisions had obliged perpetrators of wartime sexual
violence to compensate the survivors.
42. Continuing with the example of Bosnia and Herzegovina, I was
informed that in order to bridge the gap between the women who are
active and vocal in seeking justice and peace and reconciliation
processes in the non-institutional or local sphere (municipal level,
in arts, culture, non-governmental, at the individual activist level)
and the institutional levels of parliament and government, progress
was needed in women’s political participation towards the levels
prescribed by the Local Gender Equality Law. The culture of masculinity
still pervasive in high-level politics needed to make way for a
culture which gave new impetus to work on peace and reconciliation,
at the same time de-politising peace and reconciliation processes.
Otherwise, these processes would remain side-lined and marginalised
in the places where it mattered greatly – institutional political
life in Bosnia and Herzegovina.
5.5. Conditions
for change in the region: youth, economic stability, equality and
democracy
43. Mr Osorio put great emphasis
on the need for “youth and truth”, that is for young people to be
able to see that justice is done, that States are engaged in reconciliation,
and that hate and hate speech is not allowed: instead, there was
a relative silence both in the region and on the part of international
organisations. National prosecution of war crimes had been ineffective
and the International Criminal Tribunal for the former Yugoslavia
(ICTY) had largely failed in its mission. The Council of Europe’s
newly established enlarged partial agreement on an Observatory on
History Teaching
would
certainly help in establishing guidelines and standards for teaching
the more difficult parts of Europe’s history like this one. The
Council of Europe’s European Youth Foundation could also be asked
to put priority on young women in conflict and transgenerational
transmission of the memory of conflict.
44. The economic cost of conflict had to be taken into account.
Women had borne the brunt of the cost of supporting families and
communities during the war, now they needed to be given a return
on their investment, with job opportunities and encouragement to
embark in enterprise. Corruption was a severe problem in the region,
criminals had returned and were demonstrating their regained wealth
publicly.
45. All panellists agreed that economic factors and overcoming
poverty were key, that gender equality was essential, and that there
could be no reconciliation without real democracy. “State capture”
of public discourse resulted in media capture on the same lines,
and unfortunately, this lack of democratic functioning was perpetuating
tensions and the risk of new conflict. Women’s interests needed
better representation, but there was also a need for women to be
representatives of all women, not just a highly educated elite.
All the countries of the Balkans should also return to reconciliation
discussions.
46. On 9 September 2019, the first Sarajevo Pride March was described
by Ms Bošnjak as an interesting indirect approach to peacebuilding,
intentionally crossing ethnic and entity lines and created as a
“Bosnian-Herzegovinian Pride” with an organising committee composed
of members from Sarajevo, Banja Luka, Mostar, and Tuzla.
47. There was also one recent good example of war crimes being
faced with integrity and honesty – the new mayor of Sarajevo, Benjamina
Karić, had decided to mark the Kazani pit as a place where Serb
citizens had been killed in the war. In Serbia, legislation had
made substantial progress, except with respect to war crimes. There
was a helpline for victims of violence, and the government had set
up a new structure to support women, which however was hampered
by a lack of confidentiality in procedures. One of the conclusions
of my research was that stronger governments were needed in order
for transitional justice to be done.
6. Case
study: The Hague – seat of the international criminal courts and
a hub for peace-building initiatives and action
48. The choice of The Hague for
a fact-finding visit on this subject was an excellent one, as the
Netherlands’ capital is the seat of many organisations and NGOs
involved in peace building and post-conflict situations, some specifically
working with women, as well as providing examples of good practices
at government level. It was also a good transition between the overview
of civil society peace building and reconciliation activities in post-conflict
countries, and a closer look at legal aspects of the prosecution
of war crimes, the identification and recognition of victims and
punishment of perpetrators. At the same time, I was able to compare
the work of NGOs in the Netherlands, where outreach and assistance
extends globally rather than regionally.
49. I was able to meet with representatives of the International
Criminal Court and to learn how they implement gender-specific measures
in prosecution, recording of testimonials, witness protection and
victim compensation. I also met with the President and several officials
at the Residual Mechanism for the International Criminal Tribunal
for the former Yugoslavia. I held meetings with the members of the
Oversight Board of United Nations Security Council Resolution 1325
on women and peace and security, composed of ministry representatives
and NGOs, an excellent example of co-operation between the authorities
and civil society in monitoring implementation of the Resolution,
and which could and should be applied to other treaties.
50. I also met with Vanessa Newby, Director of the Women in International
Security programme for the Netherlands (WIIS-NL) at the Leiden University
Campus The Hague, and with Meka Abdulgebbar from the Advisory Council.
Finally, I participated in a round table, organised at the headquarters
of leading NGO WO=MEN, with a dozen NGOs working with and for women
in assistance, protection and peace building, followed by a working
lunch organised by the Cordaid NGO with four Afghan women activists,
who recounted their experiences in Afghanistan and since their evacuation
in August 2021.
6.1. Upholding
justice and security for women in the international tribunals
51. My visits to the International
Criminal Court and to the International Residual Mechanism for Criminal Tribunals
(for the Former Yugoslavia IRMICTY) in The Hague provided insight
into the challenges of prosecuting war crimes, especially with respect
to gender-based violence, and of the need to hand down judgments
which provide sufficient reparation to victims and serve as a deterrent
to future potential perpetrators.
52. I was impressed first of all by the recent action on gender
issues at the ICC: case law on gender-based crimes, which is fairly
recent, is being built up considerably, and action such as the acceleration
of processes for victims of sexual and gender-based crimes and crimes
against children are part of the strategic goals. In December 2021
the Prosecutor designated a new Special Advisor on gender persecution,
and a new policy on investigating gender-based crimes amounting
is under preparation, which will include an intersectional dimension.
I was reminded that gender-based violence is also committed against
men, for instance during internal conflict where those opposing
the belligerent majority are oppressed. During my visit one of my meetings
was with Sanyu Ndagire, Focal Point for Gender with the Office of
the Prosecutor.
53. Another development has been the growing attention given to
the role of female investigators: witnesses and victims very often
reacted differently when facing men or women, which in the case
of gender-based violence can lead to “under-reporting”. In the ICC,
41% of investigators are women. Overall, 56% staff are women. Among
prosecutors, 64% are women.
54. In all the international organisations I exchanged with there
is a growing recognition of the need for internal gender equality
within structure and at all levels. This is recognised not only
as a guarantee of equity in staff policies – equal recruitment and
career opportunities, equal pay scales, etc – but also, and essentially, as
a means of enabling differentiated and balanced corporate approaches
and work values, as a precondition for the democratic values and
policies of the institution itself to be successfully designed and
implemented.
55. IRMCT President Judge Carmel Agius explained that a report
on gender equality is presented every year to the UN General Assembly.
The President, the Prosecutor and the Registrar are designated gender champions,
and whereas in overall staff levels parity is close, there is still
a long way to go amongst judges. Judge Agius had contributed to
the shaping of the definition of rape as a crime against humanity,
a weapon of ethnic cleansing (Muslim girls in Bosnia and Herzegovina)
but also in the context of genocide (Rwanda).
56. This definition was one of the legacies of the residual mechanisms,
on which the International Court of Justice had based its work,
and from which the Rome Statute had also drawn its inspiration.
The mechanism has served to highlight the gravity of cases of gender-based
violence, and to shed light on the lasting consequences of conflict
in society. As I saw for the Balkans, these consequences for women
include bereavement (the Mothers of Srebrenica), moral harm (destruction
of homes and significant places such as burial places), blame (women
who were raped were suspected of collaboration, or of bringing the
act upon themselves) and other stigma, which in turn translate into
social and economic marginalisation. For both courts it was clear
that restitution and rehabilitation of victims was difficult, and
that compensation could only be symbolic, described as being only
“enough to dry their tears”.
57. Speaking to officials about the need for women to be equality
represented in courts echoed with recent developments in Ukraine,
among others the nomination of the first woman Prosecutor General,
Iryna Venediktova. Speaking to the American media on 11 April 2022
she explained that her office was investigating 5 800 cases of Russian
war crimes, with more and more proceedings every day. Her approach
is to examine “who wanted this war, who started this war and who
continued this war” through four approaches: criminal investigations,
co-ordination and support of investigations for the ICC (war crimes
and crimes against humanity), joint cross-border investigation teams
(with Poland, for instance) and support to other national investigations,
including through universal jurisdiction.
58. The work of the Ukrainian Parliament Commissioner for Human
Rights (Ombudsperson), Liudmyla Denysova, is also important to underline.
And among the most prominent and active women leaders since the war
began is Deputy Prime Minister Iryna Vereshchuk, responsible for
negotiating safe corridors for evacuation of civilians and prisoner
of war exchanges.
6.2. Feminist
foreign policy – a developing concept?
59. According to the Centre for
Feminist Foreign Policy, such policy constitutes “an alternative
to traditional foreign policy thinking focused on military force
and domination, offering an intersectional rethinking of security from
the point of view of the most vulnerable – women and other marginalised
groups”. Our colleague Petra Stienen prepared a report on the subject
in 2020.
At
the Ministry for Foreign Affairs in The Hague, I met with the task
force on gender equality and exchanged on feminist foreign policy,
where Ms Pascale Grothuis explained the role of diplomacy in peace
building. Active diplomacy and gender mainstreaming were at the heart
of activities, as was setting the example and championing women’s
empowerment.
7. Conclusions
60. Finding solutions which guarantee
justice and security for women in peace reconciliation is a complex and
many-faceted question, which begins by ensuring equality in all
areas. Not only must women be empowered to become leaders, politicians,
but at the same time the roles they already assume at home and in
the community must be given more value.
61. The recommendations I have made in the draft resolution endeavour
to encompass the different conditions for assuring women’s place
in peace and reconciliation in times of peace as well as during
conflict. These include the need to join and use international conventions
and tools for women’s protection, participation and empowerment,
including the Council of Europe’s Istanbul Convention, the UN Convention
for the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women
and the UN Women, Peace, and Security agenda, as well as Security
Council Resolution 1325. There must be a gender perspective in all
policies, taking into consideration the needs of women and girls
during conflict, repatriation and resettlement, rehabilitation, reintegration,
and post-conflict reconstruction. Women must be present and active
at all stages of peace building, recognised not only as victims
of war but as actors at the forefront of peacekeeping, defence and
of humanitarian action among others.
62. My research showed that transitional justice is a precondition
for rebuilding peaceful societies and attaining closure for victims.
Therefore, with respect to prosecution of crimes committed during
conflict, I call on all member States, including my own, to ratify
the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court if they have
not already done so, so that crimes against humanity, war crimes
and aggression may be submitted to international investigation and
prosecution. The collection of testimonies from persons having suffered
sexual violence during a conflict must be facilitated by providing
expert support and guarantees of confidentiality.
63. Finally, the work of independent institutions such as Ombudspersons
must be encouraged, and the women’s civil society organisations
allowed to carry out their work of accompanying women who suffer
the consequences of conflict – migrants, refugees and asylum-seekers
as well as internally displaced persons, victims of gender-based
violence, and supporting women who are survivors of violence due
to war.
64. The information visit to The Hague especially brought home
even more strongly the absolute necessity, on the one hand for women
to be present and active in all peace and reconciliation processes,
and on the other to continue developing gender-sensitive practices
which must be ringfenced by legislation. Women are already decision
makers, policy makers, communicators, legislators and judges, but
there must be more of them.