Peace Archives - https://wreeusa.com/category/peace/ WREE USA, part of the Womens International Democratic Federation Sat, 08 Feb 2025 14:17:26 +0000 en-US hourly 1 https://wordpress.org/?v=6.7.2 https://i0.wp.com/www.wreeusa.org/wp-content/uploads/2022/09/cropped-logo-wree-transparent-1-e1663301249183.png?fit=32%2C32&ssl=1 Peace Archives - https://wreeusa.com/category/peace/ 32 32 210575642 Fighting Back with Peace: CODEPINK Brings Antiwar Message to Inauguration Day Actions Across the Country https://www.wreeusa.org/fighting-back-with-peace-codepink-brings-antiwar-message-to-inauguration-day-actions-across-the-country/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=fighting-back-with-peace-codepink-brings-antiwar-message-to-inauguration-day-actions-across-the-country Fri, 07 Feb 2025 14:15:54 +0000 https://wreeusa.com/?p=441 Originally published by CodePink – https://www.codepink.org/j20reportback Like most in the United States, you are probably trying to process the dangerous list of executive orders issued by President Donald Trump immediately after being sworn into office yesterday. While it is a lot to take in, now is not the time to retreat. Now is the time to […]

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Originally published by CodePink – https://www.codepink.org/j20reportback

Like most in the United States, you are probably trying to process the dangerous list of executive orders issued by President Donald Trump immediately after being sworn into office yesterday. While it is a lot to take in, now is not the time to retreat. Now is the time to show up for peace and justice and demand the better world we deserve. And that is precisely what CODEPINK Chapters across the country did the past few days by participating in nationwide rallies, protests, and marches. 

We took to the streets during the inauguration week, from Jan. 18-20, bringing the message of peace and the urgent need to end the funding of wars and move the money to the needs of the people. 

On Saturday, our DC team kicked off the days of action by joining the People’s March for Peace, Justice, and Equality. DC organizer Adnaan Stumo explained why it was important to show up:

“We are here as a CODEPINK contingent because it is not enough to say we are against one president or another. We are here to dismantle the imperialist state, to stop the endless wars that the U.S. is committed to starting all over the world, and to say you cannot be bombing women in other countries and call yourself a feminist.”

On Sunday, the team brought their message to Union Station. There, they welcomed inauguration attendees to DC, where they found common ground with some Trump supporters they engaged with: people want an end to war. 

As snow covered DC on Monday and the billionaire class gathered in the rotunda to watch Donald Trump take the presidency, CODEPINK joined the We Fight Back march and rally at Malcolm X Park to demand a peaceful future that centers the needs of the people over interests of the wealthy elite. CODEPINK’s campaign manager, Makayla Hester, spoke at the rally. 

“We have to make a commitment to show up for each other regardless of who is in office. And that’s not just a commitment we made here today, or a year ago, or two years ago. We have made that commitment since the movement began.” 

https://youtube.com/watch?v=IZ-l65-d-Xk%3Ffeature%3Doembed

While much of the media was focused on DC, CODEPINK chapters rallied, marched, and tabled in their communities nationwide because we know the fight for peace and justice starts at home. While the extreme weather forced actions in Chicago and Milwaukee to be canceled, we were still able to show up for peace and liberation in multiple cities! 

In NYC, thousands came together for their own We Fight Back march and rally, where we joined the antiwar contingent! With the news of the recent ceasefire agreement, we marched to honor the martyrs and stand together with Palestinians around the world, united in the hope of an actual ceasefire. CODEPINK NYC emphasized the urgent need for a permanent ceasefire in Gaza and an end to the occupation, showing solidarity with Palestinians in their liberation struggle.

CODEPINK Missouri braved the frigid weather to bring the message of peace and justice to the St. Louis We Fight Back march and rally.

Deep in the heart of Texas, CODEPINK Dallas centered the demand for a permanent ceasefire at their local march and rally. 

Members of CODEPINK Reno took to the streets in Carson City with messages of peace. 

CODEPINK Las Vegas showed up with big, bright, beautiful signs advocating for love not war and a Free Palestine.

Over on the West Coast, CODEPINK Sacramento and CODEPINK Inland Empire joined their local People’s Marches. Inland Empire marched in Riverside to make it clear that international feminism is for all and Palestine is a feminist issue. They also gave information about our Mask Off Maersk campaign to educate and activate the community.

In Sacramento, the newly formed CODEPINK chapter took the opportunity to table outside their local march and rally to introduce CODEPINK to the community.

On Monday, CODEPINK joined their local march and rally with a more personal message: Fight Fires, Not Wars! Thousands came together to demand full compensation to victims from L.A., and state officials and CODEPINK LA members were there to make the connections between the U.S. military and the climate crisis.

This year is full of uncertainty, but CODEPINK members set the tone for responding in the past few days: Show up! Be loud! Demand an end to all wars! Demand an end to occupations and genocide! Demand accountability! A better world is not only possible but necessary, and we won’t stop organizing until we get it.

JOIN THE FEMINIST ANTIWAR MOVEMENT AND ORGANIZE WITH US FOR A BETTER WORLD FREE FROM WAR! 

Originally published by CodePink – https://www.codepink.org/j20reportback

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Open Letter to the UN on Women, Peace, and Security https://www.wreeusa.org/open-letter-to-the-un-on-women-peace-and-security/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=open-letter-to-the-un-on-women-peace-and-security Fri, 10 Jan 2025 02:19:14 +0000 https://wreeusa.com/?p=430 In advance of the October 2024 Security Council Open Debate on Women, Peace and Security, this open letter was sent to UN Member States on behalf of 628 civil society signatories from 110 countries working on issues related to gender equality and women’s rights, peace and security, human rights, humanitarian assistance, and protection of civilians. […]

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In advance of the October 2024 Security Council Open Debate on Women, Peace and Security, this open letter was sent to UN Member States on behalf of 628 civil society signatories from 110 countries working on issues related to gender equality and women’s rights, peace and security, human rights, humanitarian assistance, and protection of civilians. The letter calls on the Security Council and Member States to take decisive action to protect women’s rights in conflicts and crises around the world.

Dear Ambassadors,

Ahead of this year’s annual open debate on women, peace and security (WPS), and one year before the 25th anniversary of Resolution 1325 (2000), we write to you as civil society organizations dedicated to peace, women’s rights and gender equality to urge you to redouble your efforts to fulfill the highest ideals of the WPS agenda.

Today, we are confronted with record levels of armed conflict, militarization and military spending, which undermine gender equality, threaten to reverse decades of progress on women’s rights, and jeopardize global efforts for peace. Women and marginalized groups bear the brunt of conflicts and crises, including conflict-related sexual violencepovertyforced displacement and hunger. Increased militarization has been accompanied by multi-pronged assaults on universal norms, especially international human rights and humanitarian law; on women human rights defenders and civil society space; and on democracy itself. Further, an escalating global backlash against gender justice and the human rights and bodily autonomy of women and LGBTQIA+[1] people, compounded by their systematic exclusion from international decision-making and peacemaking, means that those most adversely affected by armed conflict are also those whose voices are most marginalized.

The WPS agenda’s vision of peace and equality[2] has never been so important — or so under threat.

The cost of the international community’s failure to fully implement the WPS agenda over the past 24 years can be measured in lives lost, rights denied and conflicts prolonged. Yet, feminist movements continue to fight back against misogyny and repression for a more just and peaceful future. They refuse to accept anything less than their rights — and neither should you.

The UN Security Council cannot afford to let another anniversary pass without meaningful progress on protecting women’s rights in conflict. We therefore urge you to take decisive action in the following 10 areas and implement them in all crises on its agenda[3]:

  1. Prevent, avert and end conflict. Ending violence is the most effective means to protect the rights of women and girls in all conflicts and crises. As enshrined in the UN Charter, it is the primary responsibility of the Security Council to maintain peace and security. Conflict prevention requires addressing the gendered drivers of conflict, including patriarchy; all forms of inequality, including socioeconomic inequality; multiple and intersecting forms of discrimination; exclusion; and violation of human rights. There is no situation in which gender equality and women’s rights are not relevant. We therefore urge the Security Council to ensure that the rights of women and girls are fundamental to all international peace and security processes, including its own decisions, without exception. Further, the Council must uphold international human rights and humanitarian law, and all relevant Security Council resolutions, including on WPS, and step up preventive diplomacy to ensure inclusive, gender-responsive, long-term and peaceful resolution to all conflicts.
  2. Reform the Security Council. The credibility of the Security Council to meaningfully fulfill its mandate has been fundamentally shaken by its inability to effectively address conflicts, including, most recently, Israel’s brutal war in Gaza and Russia’s invasion of Ukraine, both of which have had devastating consequences for the rights of women and marginalized communities. We urge you to commit to Security Council reform in order to build a more representative, transparent, democratic and accountable multilateral system that can effectively deliver on the UN Charter’s promise of peace. This should include credible, timely and decisive Security Council action to prevent or end the commission of genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes, and lead to ending the use of the veto on resolutions aimed at stopping mass atrocities. We further urge you to sign the Accountability, Coherence and Transparency Group’s Code of Conduct, thereby pledging not to vote against a credible draft resolution before the Security Council aimed at stopping such crimes.
  3. Stop arms transfers when there is a substantial risk that they may be used to “commit or facilitate serious acts of gender-based violence or serious acts of violence against women and children,” or if Member States have knowledge or should have known at the time of authorization that they would be used in the commission of genocide, crimes against humanity, grave breaches of the Geneva Conventions, attacks directed against civilians or civilian objects, or other war crimes, in line with the Arms Trade Treaty (ATT). Compliance with obligations and norms on disarmament, arms control and non-proliferation[4] is critical to conflict prevention, and backsliding on disarmament commitments risks future violence. States have a legal obligation to comply with arms embargoes imposed by the Security Council. We further urge you to cut military spending and instead increase funding for gender equality and global humanitarian responses to ensure no needs go unmet.
  4. Defend women’s human rights. Women’s civil, political, economic, social and cultural rights, as enshrined in international law and Security Council resolutions, are the foundation of the WPS agenda.[5] The Security Council must therefore center human rights, especially the rights of women, girls and LGBTQIA+ people, in all peace and security discussions, processes and decisions; take coordinated action to counter gender backlash; and reject any outcomes that undermine women’s rights. Council members must also consistently, and publicly, demand that warring parties and other relevant actors immediately abolish any laws, policies or practices that prevent or restrict the full enjoyment of women’s human rights in accordance with international standards.
  5. Advance reproductive justice. Reproductive autonomy, and the right to live in safe, peaceful and sustainable communities, is essential for women in conflicts and crises everywhere. We urge Security Council members to protect and uphold sexual and reproductive health and rights (SRHR) in accordance with international standards, including relevant WPS resolutions, in all conflict situations on its agenda.[6] We further urge you to politically and financially support comprehensive, high quality and non-discriminatory SRHR services, including access to contraception, safe abortion and maternal health care, and fully integrate these rights into crisis prevention, response and recovery plans.
  6. Insist on women at the table. Women have the right to full and equal representation.[7] Politically and financially support the full, equal, meaningful and safe participation and leadership of diverse women[8] at all levels and stages of decision-making, with the target of 50%.[9] In particular, we urge you to prioritize women’s direct participation in formal Track 1 or high-level peace and political processes, especially the meaningful representation of women human rights defenders, peacebuilders and feminist movements. Women must be able to influence the outcome and implementation of negotiations, across all issues. Further, demand the equal, direct and influential participation of women as a standard requirement across all UN-supported peace processes and convenings.[10] The Security Council, the UN and Member States must not endorse, facilitate, participate in or support peace or political processes where women are excluded.
  7. Support principled humanitarian action. Ensure gender-responsive, locally-led humanitarian action, and safe, unhindered humanitarian access to affected populations of all genders and diversities, as required by international humanitarian law. A principled humanitarian response is only possible when it centers non-discrimination and the fundamental human rights and participation of diverse women.[11] Allowing discriminatory laws, policies and practices to determine or impose constraints on how humanitarian actors operate — such as by deploying male-only response teams or denying access to services based on sexual orientation and gender identity — undermines humanitarian principles, limits access to diverse women and girls, reinforces exclusion and further threatens women’s rights. Support diverse women’s participation in the design and implementation of, and all decision-making on, humanitarian action.
  8. Demand justice and accountability. All violations of women’s rights, including all forms of gender-based violence, conflict-related sexual violence and attacks against women human rights defenders, must be publicly condemned, thoroughly and swiftly investigated, and perpetrators held accountable. Respect for international humanitarian and human rights law, including compliance with provisional measures of the International Court of Justice (ICJ); upholding the obligation to prevent genocide; and ending impunity, are paramount obligations of Member States and essential for securing justice for survivors. We urge you to pursue accountability strategies that center gender, including by considering codifying gender apartheid, supporting prosecutions of gender persecution at the International Criminal Court, and ensuring accountability for violations of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) at the ICJ. All justice and accountability efforts, including reparations processes, must be rights-based and survivor-centered, in order to avoid replicating harm, promote recovery and address root causes of violations, such as discrimination and inequality.
  9. Stand with feminist movements, the heart of the WPS agenda. The UN and all Member States must commit to and fully implement a zero-tolerance approach[12] to any form of attack, intimidation, retaliation or reprisal against diverse women for their political participation, human rights and humanitarian work, peacebuilding activities or cooperation with UN mechanisms, including the Security Council. However, protection must never compromise participation. It is critical that independent and diverse women civil society and human rights defenders continue to inform all peace and security policymaking, including Security Council discussions;[13] that their independent selection and views are fully respected; and, most importantly, that their recommendations are acted upon.
  10. Fund peace, not war. Increase funding to local women-led, women’s rights and LGBTQIA+ organizations, networks and movements, and support initiatives that promote gender equality and feminist leadership. Provide direct, accessible, long-term and flexible funding to, and promote partnerships with, women civil society, in order for them to work safely, sustainably and effectively, free of impediments.[14] Meet the minimum target of earmarking 15% of funds for programs that advance gender equality and allocate a minimum of 1% of overseas development assistance for women’s rights and women-led peacebuilding organizations by 2025 with a firm commitment to increasing it in the future.[15] We further urge you, as donors, to support the independence and integrity of civil society organizations, especially organizations working on contested issues, to ensure that they are able to sustain their indispensable work, free of obstacles or interference.

Over the last 24 years, women civil society, including human rights defenders, peacebuilders and feminist movements, have stood on the frontlines of conflict: advocating for peace, elevating the voices of affected communities, and speaking truth to power — all while charting a clear path toward more just, equal and peaceful societies. Ahead of the 25th anniversary of Resolution 1325, the women, girls and LGBTQIA+ people of Afghanistan, the Central African Republic, Colombia, the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Haiti, Iraq, Libya, Mali, Myanmar, the Occupied Palestinian Territory, Somalia, South Sudan, Sudan, Syria, Ukraine, Western Sahara, Yemen and all other crises on the Security Council’s agenda will be looking to you to deliver on 25 years of promises.

Originally published by the NGO Working Group on Women, Peace, and Security – https://www.womenpeacesecurity.org/

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Violence Against Women Increased During the Israel War: https://www.wreeusa.org/violence-against-women-increased-during-the-israeli-war/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=violence-against-women-increased-during-the-israeli-war Wed, 27 Nov 2024 16:32:11 +0000 https://wreeusa.com/?p=389 More than 120,000 women in Israel were harmed by a crime of violence or the threat of violence in 2023 and 32 of them were murdered. This is according to a report published yesterday (Sunday) by the Central Bureau of Statistics, on the occasion of the International Day of the Fight for the Prevention of […]

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More than 120,000 women in Israel were harmed by a crime of violence or the threat of violence in 2023 and 32 of them were murdered. This is according to a report published yesterday (Sunday) by the Central Bureau of Statistics, on the occasion of the International Day of the Fight for the Prevention of Violence against Women, which is observed today around the world.

The report also shows that almost one out of every five adult women in Israel was harmed by violence or a crime against them in 2023. More than half a million women, who make up 17.5% of all women aged 20 and over, reported that they were harmed last year by crimes of various types. The CBS data indicates that there is no difference in the rate of victims of sexual harassment between the religious and traditional public and the secular public.

Also according to the data, in 2023 32 women were murdered on criminal grounds or due to their gender – femicide, in 11 of the cases the suspect of the murder is a spouse (34%), in seven cases the suspect is another family member (22%) and in 14 cases the suspect is not relative (44%)

It should be noted that since the beginning of the war, a significant increase in the frequency and intensity of violence against women has been identified in the Vizo organization. The consequences do not remain only in the home arena but affect everyone who comes in daily contact with the victims, especially colleagues at their workplace. In light of the survey data conducted by the organization Witzo launched a campaign calling on employers to take an active part in the fight against the phenomenon under the title “Domestic violence is your business”.

In response to a question addressed to victims of domestic violence in a Vizo survey, it appears that 73% of them “feel protected from violence when they are at work.” 35% report that the violence at home greatly affects their ability to get to work, and many of those who do manage to maintain a work routine report fatigue and lack of concentration, avoidance of professional relationships, decreased work capacity and multiple absences. Only 23% of them asked for assistance from their workplace.

The Edva Center and the Public Housing Forum also published a document on the occasion of the International Day of the Struggle for the Prevention of Violence Against Women, centered on: the difficulty of women and children in the circle of violence to obtain a safe roof over their heads – which is a major barrier against leaving violent relationships. In the absence of a policy that would create alternatives and solutions in the field of housing for these women and their children, many women are forced to continue living in a house that has become dangerous.

In the position paper, the organizations demand the expansion of housing assistance mechanisms for women victims of violence and their children, which was submitted this year to the Committee for the Advancement of the Status of Women and Gender Equality in the Knesset.

The joint document calls on the government to recognize victims of domestic violence as entitled to public housing and to significantly expand the rent assistance amounts to which female victims of violence are entitled and to recognize a larger circle of victims of violence as entitled to housing assistance. The government is also required to act actively to exercise rights among victims of violence in general, and among victims of violence in Arab society in particular. It is also proposed to establish that women victims of violence will be entitled to an additional living allowance – until their economic independence is guaranteed.

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WAR IS NOT HEALTHY…….. https://www.wreeusa.org/war-is-not-healthy/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=war-is-not-healthy Fri, 08 Nov 2024 03:34:00 +0000 https://wreeusa.com/?p=237 War is not Healthy for Children and other Living Things

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Palestinian Women Protesting

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Women’s International Democratic Federation on the elections in Venezuela https://www.wreeusa.org/womens-international-democratic-federation-on-the-elections-in-venezuela/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=womens-international-democratic-federation-on-the-elections-in-venezuela Sat, 17 Aug 2024 19:25:11 +0000 https://wreeusa.com/?p=278 The Women's International Democratic Federation, WIDF, to the international community and the Venezuelan people expresses its solidarity with the people of the Bolivarian Republic of Venezuela who are facing these days the stubborn attack of the Venezuelan and international extreme right.

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Establishing Formal Relationship of US and Pakistan Departments of Peace https://www.wreeusa.org/establishing-formal-relationship-of-us-and-pakistan-departments-of-peace/?utm_source=rss&utm_medium=rss&utm_campaign=establishing-formal-relationship-of-us-and-pakistan-departments-of-peace Thu, 15 Sep 2022 06:14:08 +0000 https://johnreedcenter.net/wree/?p=45 Dear Friends at the Pakistan Department of Peace, It was an honor to participate in your Zoom meetings and get to know the work and accomplishments of the Pakistan Department of Peace. Pakistan has a great role to play in the world on the issue of peace, being a nuclear power and occupying a strategic […]

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Dear Friends at the Pakistan Department of Peace,

It was an honor to participate in your Zoom meetings and get to know the work and accomplishments of the Pakistan Department of Peace.

Pakistan has a great role to play in the world on the issue of peace, being a nuclear power and occupying a strategic position in South Asia, near the Middle East and the nuclear powers of India and China. Just as Pakistan and the United States have a close military relationship, it is important that the Pakistan Department of Peace and the US Department of Peace, being in the ‘belly of beasts’, have a close working relationship to mitigate the military presence of our respective countries.

We thoroughly enjoyed reading your manifesto, and learned a great deal from it about the important issues of economic justice, women’s empowerment, denuclearization/demilitarization, climate action and youth. We look forward to working closely with you and participating in your webinars on these issues. We also look forward to visits by Ali Muhammad Khan and other leaders of the Pakistan Department of Peace to us in the US, and hope to have an opportunity to visit you in Pakistan.

At this historical juncture the US and China, two of the world’s biggest nuclear powers are at odds with each other. India and Pakistan, two other large nuclear nations are in conflict. And the US military is now-in, now-out of Afghanistan and elsewhere in the Middle East creating so much destabilization and war. The role of the Pakistan Department of Peace is globally critical, so we hope together with US Department of Peace to be able to march forward with these three points:

  1. The Pakistan Department of Peace and the US Department of Peace working together to encourage other countries to establish their own Departments of Peace
  2. Then all Departments of Peace affiliating and jointly opening an office in the United Nations with consultative status;
  3. Each respective national Department of Peace leading their government to abide by their own Department of Peace Manifesto/Mission/Vision to carry on the work in their country.

Peace and Economic Justice for the whole of humanity.

Nuri Ronaghy — Co-Founder, US Department of Peace
Alan Shorb — Co-Founder, US Department of Peace

To download the original PDF of this letter, click here.

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