WUNRN

http://www.wunrn.com

 

http://www.el-karama.org/

 

'Karama’ is the Arabic word for dignity, as well as an initiative fueled by a coalition of  partners as constituencies to build a movement to end violence against women in the Middle East and North Africa. Karama puts emphasis on women from the ground up, addressing violence as they define it, with solutions of their own design.

 

During the UN Commission on the Status of Women 56 in New York, Karama hosted a one-day Conference on The Challenges and Prospects of Gender Equality in the Context of the Arab Uprisings.

Karama Logo.gif

Conference Summary: The Challenges and Prospects of Gender Equality in the Context of the Arab Uprisings

 

Panel 1: Are Arab Women Shaping the Future after the Arab Spring?

·        Success for women will come from how well we are organized, and what social and other resources women have. We must use our numbers to organize, to speak loudly, to counter what’s happening against women’s rights, to reach the political candidates, and to use the media.

 

·        Poverty and politics are the crux for women’s empowerment.  We must work at the level of the village and in rural areas to end poverty and illiteracy, so that not just the Muslim Brotherhood is recognized for this.

 

·        We have to play the game differently: we must build bridges around the different players, bring youth, progressive men, bring all who are for human rights, equality, justice, and freedom, and build a good connection to the religious men as well (e.g. developing their support for the women running for office). We have to know what is the language the Islamists’ are using to get in power, and we must make new languages.

 

·        We should examine and emulate each other’s achievements lobbying for equality in the new constitutions, such as Article 19 in Morocco, and the electoral law in Libya.  And we must assess if the Islamist governments are taking us away from gender mainstreaming and more toward a sidelined, women-in-development approach

Panel 2: Striving for New Constitutional Rights in the Context of Islamist Electoral Victories

 

·        We must realize that Islamic trend movements are not uniform when it comes to their conceptions and discourse of women’s rights. There is a split between generations within the Muslim Brotherhood (older more paternalistic, younger more used to seeing women in decision-making roles)

 

 

·        Women should not be holding ourselves to the standard of repressive countries, but rather to the most progressive countries on women’s rights issues.

 

·        Before blaming local political parties for excluding us, we should look at ourselves and rise to a higher standard

Panel 3: Women, Peace, and Security: Demanding Accountability for Implementing Resolutions 1325 and 1820 in the Arab Region

 

·        1325 is an extremely useful tool for lobbying at the international levels, and national action plans for 1325 must be  written with the participation of all stakeholders

 

·        1325 and its children have suggested a new conception of “peace” not as an absence of conflict, but as something that must be constantly negotiated and upheld even during periods of stability

 

·        1325/ 1820 are  not well disseminated at the national level, and more awareness-raising is necessary