MIFTAH
Tuesday, 16 April. 2024
 
Your Key to Palestine
The Palestinian Initiatives for The Promotoion of Global Dialogue and Democracy
 
 
 

Ramallah – Over the past three months, MIFTAH has actively participated both locally and internationally in efforts to enact UN Resolution 1325, particularly because MIFTAH is a member of the NGO forum to combat violence against women and the National Coalition to implement Resolution 1325 in Palestine.

In this context, MIFTAH’s Program Director for Promoting Community Participation Lamis Shuaibi-Hantouli, participated in official meetings held in New York on September 8-11, which were hosted by Post – 2015 Women’s Coalition KARAMA movement. The goal of the meetings was to provide strategic on the ground information to high level decision makers, activists and UN representatives engaged with women, peace and security issues in the region. The meetings were titled: “Women’s Action for Peace: Prospects and Challenges for Women in the Arab region” and brought together an Arab delegation of women leaders from seven Arab countries: Palestine, Libya, Morocco, Syria, Somalia and Egypt, in addition to representatives from the UN, international missions, organizations and institutions. The women discussed issues such as building security and peace by promoting women’s political participation based on UN Resolution 1325.

Shuaibi-Hantouli’s contributions in these meetings focused on the challenges faced by Palestinian women due to the continuous violations of Israeli military authorities over the past several decades. These include killing, land confiscation, giving birth at checkpoints , forced exile and the arrest of women political activists and children. Shuaibi-Hantouli cited the most recent Israeli offensive on the Gaza Strip as the best example of these violations against the Palestinians in terms of the scope of killing and displacement and the lack of any kind of international protection for them. Gaza was turned into an open field for human rights violations, especially those of women and children, she said. Other violent incidents such as the kidnapping and killing of Palestinian child Mohammed Abu Khdeir in Jerusalem by a group of settlers.

Shuaibi-Hantouli also presented a summary of the efforts made by the local Palestinian women’s movement to develop a national political agenda for peace and security, which was based on the following four points: holding the Israeli occupation accountable for its human rights violations against women and girls in occupied Palestine; protection; political participation; and prevention. These were reflected in recommendations regarding the need to provide international solidarity for Palestinian women under occupation and to ensure international and UN measures are taken to hold the occupation accountable for violations against women and girls in Palestine based on Article 11 of 1325, which:

“Emphasizes the responsibility of all States to put an end to impunity and to prosecute those responsible for genocide, crimes against humanity and war crimes.”

Shuaibi-Hantouli pointed to the role of civil society organizations in supporting the Palestinian women’s movement. These include documenting human rights violations against women and girls in Palestine, raising awareness on UN resolutions and international treaties on human rights at the community level and developing operational national strategies and lobbying and advocacy campaigns at the national and international levels to demand an end to the occupation and to hold it accountable for the ongoing human rights violations. This is in addition to contribute in publishing reports to be presented to the UN Secretary General, calling for the necessary measures to be taken.

 
 
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