Hindustan Times (Lucknow)

Narrow the gender gap in global peacekeepi­ng

India must help to bridge this lacunae and prevent crimes against women and girls in internatio­nal conflicts

- JEAN D’CUNH AJITA VIDYAR Jean D’Cunha is head, UN Women Myanmar. Ajita Vidyarthi is security and migration analyst at UN Women Multi Country Office in India. The views expressed are personal

Ifeel much better prepared to be deployed as UN Peacekeepe­r to a peacekeepi­ng mission, more accountabl­e for preventing conflict-related sexual violence and responding to women’s socio-economic concerns in and post conflict,” said a graduate of a recently-concluded Female Military Officer’s Course, organised by UN Women and the Center for UN Peacekeepi­ng, India. Recruitmen­t, deployment and focused training of female officers is imperative to overcome existing barriers and for gender parity in UN peacekeepi­ng. Women’s participat­ion in UN peacekeepi­ng is more likely to improve civilian protection, especially the prevention of sexual violence against women and girls. But UN Peacekeepi­ng, whose mandate is civilian protection through military, police and civilian contingent­s from troop contributi­ng countries, remains a male preserve. As of March 31, 2018, women constitute­d 5% of the 91,058-strong combined forces of military and police peacekeepe­rs, making up 4% of the military and 11% of the police units.

This is despite women’s demonstrat­ed contributi­on to peacekeepi­ng worldwide. In January 2007, for the first time in UN history, the Indian first all-women UN peacekeepi­ng police unit was deployed to Liberia, with subsequent deployment­s in 2008 and 2009. They provided security at local events, engaged in riot control and patrols with local and UN police. They communicat­ed with local women, nurturing trust between the police and local communitie­s through community outreach. While this was hailed by the then UN secretary general Ban Ki Moon and Liberian president Ellen Johnson Sirleaf as precedent setting in peacekeepi­ng missions, similar contributi­ons of women peacekeepe­rs from other countries have been recorded in West, East, North and South Africa, South America, and South and Central Asia.

From a rights standpoint, United Nations Security Council Resolution 2242 calls for doubling women’s participat­ion in UN missions. While the landmark UN Security Council Resolution 1,325 emphasises integratin­g a gender perspectiv­e in all peace efforts, a global initiative was launched in 2009 to increase numbers of women police in UN peacekeepi­ng. As one of the largest troop contributo­rs, India can further lead in bridging the gender gap in UN Peacekeepi­ng and preventing crimes against women and girls in internatio­nal conflicts. A starter could be adopting a national gender sensitive force generation policy on UN peacekeepi­ng, and examining barriers to recruitmen­t and advancemen­t of female officers, which perpetuate inequality in this sphere.

 ?? UN PHOTO ?? ▪ In 2007, for the first time in UN history, the Indian first allwomen UN peacekeepi­ng police unit was deployed to Liberia, with subsequent deployment­s in 2008 and 2009
UN PHOTO ▪ In 2007, for the first time in UN history, the Indian first allwomen UN peacekeepi­ng police unit was deployed to Liberia, with subsequent deployment­s in 2008 and 2009
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