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Address
Tsunami's Gender-Specific Needs: UN
The Indian Ocean
tsunami may have made no distinction between men and women in the
grim death toll it reaped with its waves but it has produced some
very gender-specific after-shocks, ranging from women's traditional
role in caring for the sick to increased cases of rape and abuse,
a United Nations agency reported today.
"Understanding and
measuring these differences is essential for an effective response,"
the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) said in a news release,
stressing the need to raise awareness on gender issues among decision-
and policy-makers to ensure that women's and men's different needs
are reflected in policies, practices and resource through the phases
of relief, rehabilitation and development.
Differentiating
between the survivors by age and sex will facilitate a sustainable
response, it added, calling for the empowerment of women by recruiting
them for assessments and ensuring their full representation in community
groups and meetings to ensure that they play a full role in decision-making
about relief.
The burden on women
may have increased due to the high number of people injured or who
become ill as epidemics develop, FAO said, noting that due to the
household division of labour, women traditionally take care of the
sick. They also have the responsibility to fetch water and may now
need to increase the amount of time dedicated to collecting both
drinking water and freshwater for agriculture crops.
"Fear of sexual
violence has been reported to limit women's and girls' mobility,
for example in search of new economic opportunities," the agency
added, noting the increased cases of rape and abuse against women
and children being reported in Sri Lanka and Indonesia.
"Likewise, this
fear is behind their reluctance to moving into camps where they
could have access to food. Women and children are often the most
vulnerable because of their lower socio-economic standing, in terms
of limited access to necessary resources. They lack influence due
to inequality and disempowerment, and have often less decision-making
power and control over their lives," it said.
Looking at longer-term
needs, FAO called for the provision of credit and financial assets
to both men and women according to their livelihoods needs.
The UN Population
Fund (UNFPA) is also redoubling its efforts to meet the health and
psycho-social needs of women and youth and this week received specific
contributions of $5.5 million from the Government of Japan and $1
million from the Government of the Netherlands.
"These generous
amounts will go a long way in ensuring that the needs of women and
youth – often ignored in the aftermath of natural disasters –
are properly addressed," UNFPA Executive Director Thoraya Ahmed
Obaid said.
More than 150,000
women are currently pregnant in the affected areas, of whom 50,000
are due to give birth during the next three months, the agency noted.
Their chances of
delivering in safe and clean conditions have been jeopardized by
the damage to health facilities and loss of basic delivery care
supplies and UNFPA has appealed for $28 million to adequately help
women and youth in Indonesia, Sri Lanka and the Maldives, the three
hardest hit countries.
As part of this
effort UNFPA has sent 18 tons of supplies for maternity care to
Indonesia's Aceh Province, the worst-hit of all the devastated regions,
ranging from simple supplies for safe and sanitary home deliveries
to hospital equipment needed to re-establish emergency obstetric
care for those experiencing life-threatening complications during
childbirth.
Times Foundation
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