Progress: Procedure completed
Role | Committee | Rapporteur | Shadows |
---|---|---|---|
Lead | FEMM | NICOLAI Norica ( ALDE) | GARCÍA PÉREZ Iratxe ( S&D), ROMEVA I RUEDA Raül ( Verts/ALE), YANNAKOUDAKIS Marina ( ECR), BLOOM Godfrey ( NA), SINCLAIRE Nicole ( NA) |
Committee Opinion | AFET | ||
Committee Opinion | DEVE | GRÈZE Catherine ( Verts/ALE) | Anna ZÁBORSKÁ ( PPE) |
Lead committee dossier:
Legal Basis:
RoP 54
Legal Basis:
RoP 54Subjects
Events
The European Parliament adopted a resolution on women’s situation in war.
Parliament highlights, firstly, the fact that the effects of wartime sexual violence, both physical (risks such as sterility, incontinence and sexually transmitted diseases) and psychological, are devastating for the victims. The underlying causes of women’s vulnerability in conflict situations often lie in their limited access to, inter alia, education and the labour market and consequently women’s economic participation on an equal basis is a necessary precondition for combating gender-specific violence in armed conflicts.
Parliament also highlights the role of women in armed conflict and proposes a series of measures to improve their empowerment.
Women in peace and security leadership : Parliament calls for EU support for peace processes to be made conditional on women’s participation in the international teams leading peace negotiations. It underlines the importance of political dialogue for the empowerment of women and calls on the Commission, the European External Action Service (EEAS) and the Member States actively to promote and support the empowerment of women to participate in their relations with countries and organisations outside the EU.
The Commission and the Member States are asked to ensure that adequate technical and financial assistance is provided in support of programmes enabling women to participate to the full in the conduct of peace negotiations. Parliament calls on the European Union and its Member States to actively support increases in the number of women in the military and in civilian peace-keeping operations, especially in leadership positions, and to that end calls for:
national campaigns promoting the military and the police force as a viable option for women as well as men, in order to dispel possible stereotypes (e.g. open days); a review of promotion policy in the military, in order to examine whether women have been disadvantaged when it comes to being promoted, despite, without regard to their gender, being equal to their male colleagues; the inclusion of women-friendly policies within the military, such as the possibility of maternity leave; the inclusion of more women, especially in civilian operations, in high-ranking positions; in-depth training of men and women involved in civilian interaction on gender related aspects, on the protection, special needs and human rights of women and children in conflict situations.
Parliament also calls for adequate EU funding , including under the Instrument for Stability, for supporting women’s effective participation in, and contribution to, representative institutions at national and local level and at all levels of decision-making in the context of conflict resolution, peace negotiations, peace-building and post-conflict planning.
The impact of armed conflict on women : Parliament strongly condemns the continued use of sexual violence against women as a weapon of war equal to a war crime and calls for zero tolerance to be exercised in this respect. Parliament points to the need to establish a code of conduct for EU personnel serving in military and civil missions which makes it clear that sexual exploitation constitutes unjustifiable and criminal behaviour. It welcomes the recent UN investigations into the allegations of sexual exploitation involving its peacekeepers in the Côte d’Ivoire UN Operation.
Parliament calls for several specific measures in this framework:
the mobilisation of political leadership with a view to putting forward a coordinated set of measures for the prevention and alleviation of the use of sexual violence (in particular in Congo at least 8 300 rapes were reported in 2009 and that at least 1 244 women reported being raped in the first quarter of 2010, which is an average of 14 rapes per day); promote the introduction of measures designed to limit the adverse effects of armed conflict on family life; stronger cooperation with local women’s organisations in order to establish an early-warning system and possibly to enable them to prevent the abuses or reduce their occurrence themselves; support local civil society groups, particularly women’s groups and those with a gender-sensitive agenda, through accessible funding and capacity-building in order to enable them to fulfil their role as a watchdog, especially in the context of failing states; awareness-raising campaigns to be introduced and/or stepped up as part of education programmes, bringing respect for women’s dignity to the forefront; armed forces to run women’s clinics to deal with sexual and psychological violence in war zones; the issue of impunity be a principal factor in peace negotiations ; reliable and equitable justice to be delivered within reasonable time limits and with respect for the dignity of women who are victims of war.
Parliament calls for the EU and the Member States effectively to support the implementation of the EU guidelines on violence against women , through specific measures such as: (i) the establishment of an effective system to monitor all legal proceedings and their follow-up relating to cases of such violence; (ii) the adoption of measures, strategies and programmes that focus not only on the protection and prosecution elements, but more importantly on prevention; (iii) programmes providing free health and psychological counselling to victims of violence in their native language and in line with their culture and customs, where possible by women practitioners; (iv) programmes providing health courses and easily accessible literature, targeting women and men; (v) specific steps to be taken to ensure that women in conflict situations have fair access to public health systems; (vi) developing witness protection programmes in order to protect victims and to encourage them, under the guarantee of protection, to come forward and testify against their aggressors.
The Commission, the EEAS and Parliament delegations are called upon to find ways to promote the signature, ratification and implementation of the 1998 Rome Statute (for the International Criminal Court) by those developing countries that have not already done so, as a necessary step towards protecting women’s sexual rights during times of war and averting the impunity of perpetrators.
As regards the victims , Parliament calls for i) the adoption of ad hoc provisions affording additional protection to women against rape, forced prostitution and any other form of indecent assault , as well as particular care for expectant mothers and mothers of young children with regard to the provision of food, clothing, evacuation and transportation and medical facilities, in order to avoid unwanted pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases, (as priority areas under the Development Financing Instrument for the 2014-2020 period); ii) the examination of the possibility of establishing rapid-response units made up of trained personnel (such as doctors, psychologists, sociologists and legal advisors) with a view to providing immediate in situ support to the victims of gender crimes; iii) the examination of the possibility of adequate compensation for victims in accordance with the applicable international and national law; and iv) the need to be addressed of complementing the image of women as vulnerable victims with an image of women as a highly differentiated group of social actors.
Lastly, Parliament made a series of technical recommendations which aim to:
create a Special EU Representative on Women, Peace and Security within the EEAS, in order to mainstream the gender perspective and to liaise more efficiently with its counterparts in the UN; give special attention to gender mainstreaming in the context of peace research, conflict prevention and resolution, peace-keeping operations and post-conflict rehabilitation and reconstruction; encourage the EEAS, the Commission and the Member States to incorporate development issues – in particular, the recognition of mothers’ right to receive protection and support and to care for and bring up their children, as well as women’s health and economic security; adopt, implement and monitor their National Action Plans on women, peace and security; ensure balanced recruitment in missions and operations and to promote more women to the leadership level; underline the importance of awareness-raising campaigns in the fight against stereotypes, discrimination (based on gender, culture or religion) and domestic violence; establish an adequate public complaint procedures in the context of CSDP missions, which would particularly assist the reporting of sexual and gender-based violence; set up specific budget lines for gender expertise, and projects and activities on women, peace and security in CSDP missions; increase the financial resources allocated for promoting gender equality and women’s rights in the future Development Financing Instruments for the 2014-2020 period; improve the complementarity and timely mobilisation of all financial instruments for EU external action in order to avoid fragmentation of the EU’s response to women’s situation in war; support the various initiatives to create gender-specific early-warning and conflict surveillance indicators, such as those taken by UN Women, the Council of Europe, the Swiss Foundation for Peace, International Alert and the Forum on Early Warning and Early Response.
The Committee on Women’s Rights and Gender Equality adopted the report by Norica NICOLAI (ALDE, RO) on women’s situation in war.
The report states that the effects of wartime sexual violence, both physical (risks such as sterility, incontinence and sexually transmitted diseases) and psychological, are devastating for the victims. The underlying causes of women’s vulnerability in conflict situations often lie in their limited access to, inter alia, education and the labour market and consequently women’s economic participation on an equal basis is therefore a necessary precondition for combating gender-specific violence in armed conflicts.
Members highlight the role of women in armed conflict and propose a series of measures to improve their empowerment:
Women in peace and security leadership : the report calls for EU support for peace processes to be made conditional on women’s participation in the international teams leading peace negotiations. It underlines the importance of political dialogue for the empowerment of women and calls on the Commission, the European External Action Service (EEAS) and the Member States actively to promote and support the empowerment of women to participate in their relations with countries and organisations outside the EU.
The Commission and the Member States are asked to ensure that adequate technical and financial assistance is provided in support of programmes enabling women to participate to the full in the conduct of peace negotiations and empowering women in civil society as a whole. Members call for an increase in the number of women in the military and in civilian peace-keeping operations, especially in leadership positions, and to that end call for:
national campaigns promoting the military and the police force as a viable option for women as well as men, in order to dispel possible stereotypes; a review of promotion policy in the military, in order to examine whether women have been disadvantaged when it comes to being promoted, despite, without regard to their gender, being equal to their male colleagues; the inclusion of women-friendly policies within the military, such as the possibility of maternity leave; the inclusion of more women, especially in civilian operations, in high-ranking positions; in-depth training of men and women involved in civilian interaction on gender related aspects, on the protection, special needs and human rights of women and children in conflict situations.
Moreover, Members call for adequate EU funding , including under the Instrument for Stability, for supporting women’s effective participation in, and contribution to, representative institutions at national and local level and at all levels of decision-making in the context of conflict resolution, peace negotiations, peace-building and post-conflict planning.
The impact of armed conflict on women : Members strongly condemn the continued use of sexual violence against women as a weapon of war equal to a war crime and call for zero tolerance for the sexual exploitation of children and women in armed conflicts. They welcome the recent UN investigations into the allegations of sexual exploitation involving its peacekeepers in the Côte d’Ivoire UN Operation.
Members call for several specific measures in this framework:
the mobilisation of political leadership with a view to putting forward a coordinated set of measures for the prevention and alleviation of the use of sexual violence (in particular in Congo at least 8 300 rapes were reported in 2009 and that at least 1 244 women reported being raped in the first quarter of 2010, which is an average of 14 rapes per day); promote the introduction of measures designed to limit the adverse effects of armed conflict on family life; stronger cooperation with local women’s organisations in order to establish an early-warning system and possibly to enable them to prevent the abuses or reduce their occurrence themselves; support local civil society groups, particularly women’s groups and those with a gender-sensitive agenda, through accessible funding and capacity-building in order to enable them to fulfil their role as a watchdog, especially in the context of failing states; awareness-raising campaigns to be introduced and/or stepped up as part of education programmes, bringing respect for women’s dignity to the forefront; armed forces to run women’s clinics to deal with sexual and psychological violence in war zones; the issue of impunity be a principal factor in peace negotiations; reliable and equitable justice to be delivered within reasonable time limits and with respect for the dignity of women who are victims of war.
The report calls for the EU and the Member States effectively to support the implementation of the EU guidelines on violence against women and girls , through specific measures such as: (i) the establishment of an effective system to monitor all legal proceedings and their follow-up relating to cases of such violence ; (ii) the adoption of measures, strategies and programmes that focus not only on the protection and prosecution elements, but more importantly on prevention; (iii) programmes providing free health and psychological counselling to victims of violence in their native language and in line with their culture and customs, where possible by women practitioners; (iv) programmes providing health courses and easily accessible literature, targeting women and men; (v) specific steps to be taken to ensure that women in conflict situations have fair access to public health systems; (vi) developing witness protection programmes in order to protect victims and to encourage them, under the guarantee of protection, to come forward and testify against their aggressors.
The Commission, the EEAS and Parliament delegations are called upon to find ways to promote the signature, ratification and implementation of the 1998 Rome Statute (for the International Criminal Court) by those developing countries that have not already done so, as a necessary step towards protecting women’s sexual rights during times of war and averting the impunity of perpetrators.
As regards the victims , the report calls on the Commission to examine the possibility of establishing rapid-response units made up of trained personnel (such as doctors, psychologists, sociologists and legal advisors) with a view to providing immediate in situ support to the victims of gender crimes and calls for an analysis of the possibility of adequate compensation for victims in accordance with the applicable international and national law. The Commission and the Member States are called upon to empower women in respect of their rights and access to land, inheritance, credit and savings in post-conflict situations.
Lastly, Members have made a series of technical recommendations which aim to:
create a Special EU Representative on Women, Peace and Security within the EEAS, in order to mainstream the gender perspective and to liaise more efficiently with its counterparts in the UN; give special attention to gender mainstreaming in the context of peace research, conflict prevention and resolution, peace-keeping operations and post-conflict rehabilitation and reconstruction; encourage the EEAS, the Commission and the Member States to incorporate development issues – in particular the recognition of mothers’ right to receive protection and support and to care for and bring up their children, as well as women’s health and economic security; adopt, implement and monitor their National Action Plans on women, peace and security; ensure balanced recruitment in missions and operations and to promote more women to the leadership level; underline the importance of awareness-raising campaigns in the fight against stereotypes, discrimination (based on gender, culture or religion) and domestic violence; establish an adequate public complaint procedures in the context of CSDP missions, which would particularly assist the reporting of sexual and gender-based violence; set up specific budget lines for gender expertise, and projects and activities on women, peace and security in CSDP missions; increase the financial resources allocated for promoting gender equality and women’s rights in the future Development Financing Instruments for the 2014-2020 period; improve the complementarity and timely mobilisation of all financial instruments for EU external action in order to avoid fragmentation of the EU’s response to women’s situation in war; support the various initiatives to create gender-specific early-warning and conflict surveillance indicators, such as those taken by UN Women, the Council of Europe, the Swiss Foundation for Peace, International Alert and the Forum on Early Warning and Early Response.
Documents
- Results of vote in Parliament: Results of vote in Parliament
- Debate in Parliament: Debate in Parliament
- Decision by Parliament: T7-0028/2012
- Committee report tabled for plenary: A7-0429/2011
- Committee opinion: PE472.333
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE472.060
- Committee draft report: PE469.948
- Committee draft report: PE469.948
- Amendments tabled in committee: PE472.060
- Committee opinion: PE472.333
Activities
- Alexander Nuno PICKART ALVARO
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Gerard BATTEN
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Andrea ČEŠKOVÁ
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Mariya GABRIEL
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Anneli JÄÄTTEENMÄKI
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Petru Constantin LUHAN
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Iosif MATULA
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Barbara MATERA
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Norica NICOLAI
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Raül ROMEVA i RUEDA
Plenary Speeches (1)
- Michèle STRIFFLER
Plenary Speeches (1)
Amendments | Dossier |
24 |
2011/2198(INI)
2011/10/12
DEVE
24 amendments...
Amendment 1 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. Urges the EEAS to appoint a special envoy for the protection of women in conflict zones, with the task to see to it that all efforts of the EU’s external action are coherent with this essential objective of respecting the rights of women; insists that this special envoy should additionally address gender identity and non- discrimination;
Amendment 10 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 a (new) 4a. Highlights the crucial importance of ensuring that women are equal actors in processes of justice reform or transnational justice processes so that they can efficiently advocate the enforcement of equal rights in national judicial systems;
Amendment 11 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 a (new) 4a. Calls for gender mainstreaming in peace research, conflict prevention and resolution, peacekeeping operations and post-conflict rehabilitation and reconstruction and for field programmes to include a gender component;
Amendment 12 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 a (new) 4a. Calls on the Commission and the EEAS to promote the involvement and participation of local women’s organisations, including in the preparation and discussion of post- conflict negotiations and agreements;
Amendment 13 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 5 5. Welcomes the EU plan of Action on Gender Equality and Women’s Empowerment in Development and calls on the EU High Representative to take all necessary measures in order to provide adequate and effective training to EU delegation staff members regarding a gender-sensitive approach to peace keeping, conflict prevention and peace building; asks the Commission and the Member States to ensure that adequate technical and financial assistance is provided in support of programmes enabling women to participate to the full in the conduct of peace negotiations and empowering women in civil society as a whole;
Amendment 14 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 5 a (new) 5a. Asks the EEAS to pay a particular attention to the growing number of corrective rapes on LGBT women taking place in pre-conflict, conflict and post- conflict situations;
Amendment 15 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 a (new) 6a. Calls upon the Commission, the EEAS and European Parliament delegations to find ways to promote the signature, ratification and implementation of the Rome Statute 1998 (for the International Criminal Court) by the developing countries that have not already done so, as a necessary step for the protection of women’s sexual rights during times of war and averting the impunity of perpetrators;
Amendment 16 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 a new 6a. Condemns the hostage taking and calls for a stronger punishment of the use of human shields during conflicts;
Amendment 17 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 b (new) 6b. Calls on the Commission and the EEAS to examine the creation of a mechanism to provide for health and psychological support to women who are victims of violations during times of war, that must always be run by women practitioners, in order to establish methods to gradually and smoothly reintegrate these women back into society by, for example, finding jobs and thus restoring social stability and cohesion;
Amendment 18 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 b (new) 6b. Calls for separately housing of women prisoners from men in particular to avoid sexual abuse;
Amendment 19 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 c (new) 6c. Calls upon the Commission to examine the possibility of establishing rapid-response units composed of trained personnel (such as doctors, psychologists, sociologists, legal advisors etc) aimed at providing immediate and in situ support to the victims of gendered crimes;
Amendment 2 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. Calls for specific provisions providing additional protection to women against rape, forced prostitution and any other form of indecent assault, particular care for expectant mothers and mothers of young children with regard to the provision of food, clothing, evacuation and transportation and medical facilities in order to avoid unwanted pregnancies and sexually transmitted diseases as priority areas under the Development Financing Instrument for the period 2014-2020;
Amendment 20 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 c (new) 6c. Underlines the importance of the right to know the fate of their missing relatives and calls on the parties to armed conflicts to take all feasible measures to account for persons reported missing;
Amendment 21 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 a (new) 6a. Suggests the appointment of a Standing Rapporteur in the European Parliament on gender equality and women’s rights in the EU’s external relations; also responsible for gender identity and non-discrimination issues;
Amendment 22 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 a (new) Amendment 23 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 a (new) 6a. Stresses that, with a view to ensuring that EU action on gender issues in fragile, conflict and post-conflict countries has a positive and lasting impact, there should be a transfer of responsibility to local non-state actors, including women’s organisations, who should be given a more prominent role;
Amendment 24 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 6 b (new) 6b. Points out that women, especially widows, separated women and orphans have difficulties returning home from refugee camps and owning land because of traditional stereotypes and because of the usual increase in land disputes after long conflicts; takes the view that the destruction of the fabric of societies brought about by conflicts should be seen as a chance to rebuild such societies in a way which guarantees women the right to own land and rights of political participation in general;
Amendment 3 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 2 a (new) 2a. Calls on the EU High Representative and the Commission to ensure that special consideration is given to women’s organisations operating at local level in the planning arrangements and financial instruments for EU external action and that they are allocated sufficient funding to be able to play a prominent role in projects relating to the management of pre-conflict, conflict and post-conflict situations, with due emphasis being placed on good practice regarding the establishment of workers’ cooperatives and access to micro-credit;
Amendment 4 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 3. Calls on the EEAS, in line with Article 9 of Council Decision 2010/427/EU of 26 July 2010, to ensure that the programming, implementation and monitoring of the country initiatives for promoting the gender perspective in pre-conflict, conflict and post-conflict situations are managed at delegation level in order better to target the specificities of each context and the probability of an existing regional dimension;
Amendment 5 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 a (new) 3a. Calls for special attention to the gender mainstreaming in the Country Strategy Papers;
Amendment 6 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 3 a (new) 3a. Stresses that even if rape as a weapon of war has been used frequently worldwide, nevertheless in recent years it has become particularly dramatic in a number of African conflicts. Calls for closer cooperation between the EU and the UN to strengthen prevention and mainstream women’s role in LRRD programmes;
Amendment 7 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 4. Strongly encourages the EEAS, the Commission and the Member States to incorporate development issues, in particular
Amendment 8 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 4. Strongly encourages the EEAS, the Commission and the Member States to incorporate development issues, in particular women’s economic and health security, into their actions affecting women in conflict zones;
Amendment 9 #
Draft opinion Paragraph 4 4. Strongly encourages the EEAS, the Commission and the Member States to incorporate development issues, in particular women’s property rights and economic security, into their actions affecting women in conflict zones;
source: PE-473.892
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