The
Women's Caucus for Gender Justice, a human rights group, presneted
this petition, signed by numerous organisations and individuals,
to the United Nations in New York on Wednesday,30 October.
TWELVE POINTS: STOP THE WAR, REBUILD A JUST SOCIETY
IN AFGHANISTAN AND SUPPORT WOMEN'S HUMAN RIGHTS.
These Twelve Points were developed in exchanges among
several women's human rights activists in New York, Asia and
Latin America following the September 11 terrorist attacks in
the United States. They are intended to suggest alternatives
to military action and the cycle of violence, destruction and
death.
The
rapidly escalating cycle of violence and retaliation in Afghanistan
and many other countries requires a response led by the United
Nations and carried out in accordance with international law.
A United Nations-led response offers the best hope for
assuring justice for the victims of the September 11 attacks
and the people of Afghanistan. The women of Afghanistan, long
subjected to brutal repression by the Taliban regime, must now
be assured a central role in determining the future of their
country.
The international community must provide the political
and economic support necessary
to secure a future in which women and all other sectors of Afghani
society can fully exercise their human rights. We therefore
urge all governments to support and implement the following:
STOP MILITARY ACTION BY THE UNITED STATES AND ITS ALLIES
AND ENSURE HUMANITARIAN ASSISTANCE
1.
The United States and its allies must immediately halt all military
action in Afghanistan. The U.N. Security Council should explicitly
reject any claim that the right of self-defense authorizes further
military action by the United States and its allies in Afghanistan
and should
itself take the necessary measures to restore international
peace and security as outlined below.
2. The United
States and its allies should not carry out any military attacks
in other states. The United Nations Security Council must explicitly
reject any claim that the right of self-defense authorizes further
military action with regard to other states and other organizations.
3. The international
community must take urgent steps to: a) ensure sufficient humanitarian
assistance to civilians in Afghanistan and Afghan refugees in
neighboring countries, including health care, shelter and food and involve Afghan women's organizations in the delivery of
such assistance; and b) protect Afghan civilians and refugees,
especially women, from violations
of their rights.
4. Military,
political and economic support for the Taliban or the Northern
Alliance from any State or other external source must be halted
immediately in order not to prolong the conflict.
5. The UN must
take the lead in peace-making, peace-keeping and peace-building
in Afghanistan. Among the key elements that should be considered
in developing a U.N.-led response are:
-- brokering
ceasefire and peace agreements
-- promoting
the broadest possible participation of civil society in
peace negotiations,
with specific measures for women's equal access and
participation;
-- ensuring
disarmament and demobilization of all combatants;
-- clearing
landmines throughout the country;
-- maintaining
peace and security;
-- preventing
and responding to human rights violations;
-- stopping
arms and drug trafficking; and
-- overseeing
reconstruction.
The UN and
the authorities of troop-contributing nations must ensure that
any UN forces act in full conformity with international
human rights and humanitarian
law. In particular, the UN and national authorities
must take effective
measures to prevent and respond to violations
against women by UN forces or other actors.
SUPPORT THE REBUILDING OF A JUST SOCIETY IN AFGHANISTAN
AND ENSURE JUSTICE FOR THE AFGHAN PEOPLE
6. Peace-building processes should be undertaken at the earliest possible
time, with the goals of restoring the rule of law, building
sustainable democratic structures representative of all sectors of society,
and promoting a just social and economic order in Afghanistan. Steps to achieve these goals include:
-- provision
of the necessary political and economic support by UN Member States and regional organizations;
-- promotion
of the broadest possible participation of civil society in reconstruction,
with specific measures for women's equal access and participation;
-- effective
guarantees of the right of Afghan refugees to return under conditions
of safety and security;
-- measures
to protect the human rights of internally displaced persons;
-- rejection
of any attempts by the United States, the United Kingdom, Russia,
Pakistan, Iran, or any other government or external sectarian
groups to interfere in the processes of reconstruction; and
-- the requirement
that decision-making about the use of Afghanistan's natural
resources be carried out only when sustainable democratic political
and economic structures are in place and the participation
of civil society in such decision-making is guaranteed.
7. During post-war
reconstruction in Afghanistan, an ad-hoc tribunal or other processes compatible with international law
must be established to ensure
justice for the people of Afghanistan for violations
suffered in the past.
8. Specific
steps must be taken to secure the full participation of Afghan
women and Afghan women's organizations in all stages of peace
negotiation and post-war reconstruction, including any transitional
government and all processes of justice.
REDRESS
THE CRIMES AGAINST HUMANITY COMMITTED ON SEPTEMBER 11 AND ADOPT
ANTI-TERRORISM STRATEGIES CONSISTENT WITH HUMAN RIGHTS
9. The perpetrators
of the crimes of September 11 should be brought to justice using
international law and procedures, through their prosecution
for crimes against humanity by an ad hoc international tribunal
or by an individual State acting in accordance with international
law, including fair trial guarantees.
10. Future
efforts to prevent and punish terrorism must comply with international
law, including all efforts by individual States and the international
community as a whole. Among the basic principles that should guide
those efforts are the following:
-- Anti-terrorism
campaigns must not be used as a means of restricting human rights;
-- The prevention
and punishment of terrorism should be carried out under international
criminal law and, where applicable, the Statute of the International
Criminal Court and international human rights guarantees;
-- All States,
and in particular the United States, must ratify the Statute
of the International Criminal Court;
-- All States
should ratify international treaties against terrorism and co-operate
fully in their implementation, including the 1999 International Convention for the Suppression of the Financing of Terrorism; and
-- All States
must ratify and implement international human rights treaties, and fulfill their duty under human rights law to prevent and respond
to human rights violations
committed by private individuals, groups or organizations, or
other non-state actors, including extremist groups
under their jurisdiction that commit violations in their own
territory or other States.
11. Strategies to prevent future terrorist acts
should address the root causes of political and religious extremism.
Among those causes are economic policies that create the conditions
of poverty and inequality in which terrorist and extremist groups
can find support for their activities
and domestic and foreign policies that authorize or condone
human rights violations. As a part of anti-terrorism strategies:
-- The policies of individual states and the international community
should be aimed at alleviating
the inequalities in and among States that have been linked to the dominance of free-market policies and trade regimes
that favor highly developed
countries;
-- All States
should adopt economic policies that promote the realization
of all human rights and the just and equal distribution of economic
benefits and at the
national level and among all States;
-- All regional
and international organizations for economic cooperation, trade
or finance, and their individual member States, should adopt
policies that aim at the just and equal distribution of economic
benefits among all States and among all groups within national
societies; and
-- All States
should adopt national policies that aim at the full realization
of human rights for all sectors of society, including access
to health care, housing, education, food, water, and
sanitation, without discrimination based on race, sex,
ethnicity, class, religion, social or national origin, political
or other opinion, language, disability, citizenship, sexual
orientation, age, occupation, or other status.
12. In many societies around the world, the politicized
use of religion by extremists takes the form of restrictions on women's right to participation
in public life, denials of their economic and social rights,
and violence and repression in private life.
These violations and the extremist beliefs that are advanced
to justify them must be addressed by individual States
and the international
community as threats to the human rights of all persons and to sustainable open societies.