Stop the rants, lay
down the guns, women want peace
Press Statement of WE
Act 1325 (Women Engaged in Action on 1325)
November 11, 2011
We, members of Women
Engaged in Action on 1325 (United Nations Security Council Resolution
1325), a national network of women in human rights, women, and peace
organizations, express our unequivocal rejection of war and military
solution to the crisis arising from the October 18 tragedy in Al-barka,
Basilan.
Roughly 30,000
civilians from affected communities in Basilan, Zamboanga Sibugay and
Lanao provinces are now scattered in various evacuation camps while
others seek refuge in homes of families and relatives who live away
from the conflict areas. Majority of the internally displaced persons
are women and children.
While We Act 1325
commends President Aquino for issuing a strict order on the primacy of
the peace process, and the MILF for staying the course of the peace
process, we ask the government and the MILF to:
1. Resume in earnest
formal negotiations on the substantive agenda;
2. Take into account
any violations of the ceasefire agreement and related mechanisms such
as the Ad Hoc Joint Action Group (AHJAG) guidelines and make the
results of investigation available to the public;
3. Institute binding
and strict measures that will compel adherence or compliance to all
agreements forged between parties in conflict;
4. Respect the
civilian character of evacuation camps and other defined safe spaces;
5. Uphold the
government’s commitment to UN Security Council Resolution 1325 (and
its succeeding resolutions) to ensure that women’s special needs in
situations of conflict are prioritized and appropriately addressed,
and their contributions valued and recognized;
6. Provide protection
from sexual harassment and other forms of gender-based violence,
especially in evacuation camps; and
7. Involve and engage
the participation of more women in formal and informal peace
negotiations or processes, as well as in relief and rehabilitation
services in affected areas.
As women, we are
alarmed that our voices and efforts for peace seem to be drowned by
the loud drums of war. We are dismayed by statements from
politicians, journalists, media and even some bishops that frame the
MILF as “the enemy” rather than a committed party to the peace
negotiations and even ceasefire agreement. They question the peace
policy and established processes of peacebuilding and
confidence-building based on government’s “six paths to peace”.
Unfortunately, they are playing to attitudes of machismo as well as
ethnic and religious discrimination that are still dominant in our
society.
We ask you to stop
depicting the other as the enemy. Stop sowing hate. The costs of war
increase when anti-peace sentiments and malicious statements are
peddled this way. Hence, we appeal to all concerned to work instead in
diffusing tension by promoting communication and understanding between
parties in conflict.
War solves nothing.
WOMEN DEMAND
ALL-OUT PEACE!