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Women's
Role in Tsunami Reconstruction
RESPONDING TO
THE TSUNAMI TRAGEDY: Women Must be at the Heart of Rebuilding Shattered
Communities
Statement by Noeleen Heyzer
Executive Director
United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM)
The Asian Tsunami struck two
days after I returned to Malaysia and Singapore to be with my family
for the New Year. Across the region, planned New Year celebrations
turned into candlelight and prayer gatherings, as the media announced
rising death tolls.
Over 150,000 have been confirmed
dead, over a million have been displaced, and at least five million
are in need of immediate assistance for survival. We may never be
able to measure the full scale of the disaster: the precise numbers
of dead, missing, and displaced and the utter decimation of lives,
homes, economies, and communities. But it is painfully clear that
we are bearing witness to of one of the most devastating natural
disasters in recent history. The tsunami recognized no distinctions
of race, ethnicity, religion, class, gender, or age.
It devastated coastal villages
as well as luxurious beach resorts. It ripped through lands stricken
by war as well as those rooted in peace. While the focus of the
response is rightly on saving lives and delivering immediate relief,
we must already start conceptualizing a comprehensive strategy for
longer-term
reconstruction and development. The approach that we take in the
current relief efforts will set the foundations for the healing
and rebuilding of shattered communities, economies, and capacities.
Both the immediate and long-term
response must be shaped by the realities on the ground in the areas
affected. In two of the worst hit areas, the province of Aceh in
Indonesia and Sri Lanka, the current devastation converges with
the complex consequences of decades-long civil war and, in some
places, severe poverty. These forces have generated division and
deprivation. But they have also led to the emergence of survival
systems and mutual-aid networks,
including among internally displaced and refugee communities. And
women have been at the forefront of many of these. So, as the international
community organizes to provide much needed assistance, it must prioritize
the mobilization and support of women's networks that are crucial
for emotional, social, and
economic recovery. In short, women must be at the heart of the relief
efforts and the re-building of shattered communities.
In Aceh, which suffered two
thirds of the total death toll of the disaster, women are renowned
for their central role in society and have for years been at the
heart of community networks. With the out-migration of men, seeking
both protection and economic security, to neighbouring provinces
and countries
since the 1980s, it is estimated that women comprised up to 70%
of Acehs population of four million. Through years of conflict,
the multiple roles women played came to form the lifeline of their
communities: heading households, sustaining subsistence economies,
raising children, and caring for the sick, wounded,
and elderly. In this province and elsewhere, women have been at
the forefront of developing survival strategies and struggling to
keep their communities and economies alive, even while bearing the
violence of war and the burden of poverty.
However, the relief and reconstruction
operations being deployed should not expose them to further danger
and trauma. Independent monitors must be immediately deployed to
ensure that all aspects of the aid operations, from distribution
to security, are aligned with international norms and codes of conduct.
Today, the women who have survived the tsunami suffer from multiple
trauma; many, including widows, have lost another round of children
and family
members to this tragedy. The women's organizations that UNIFEM has
been working with in Indonesia, Sri Lanka, India, and Thailand are
collecting information about the ways that women have been affected
by the disaster. One woman wrote to us about a colleague who survived
by climbing onto the roof of her house and now faces the third displacement
in her short life: first displaced because of war, second as reconciliation
began, and now because of the tsunami. Women's groups in Sri Lanka
have already reported incidents of rape and molestation of women
and girls in rescue operations and in temporary shelters. In Aceh,
where aid operations are taking place under the framework of continuing
civil emergency, women volunteers have reported facing harassment
and intimidation.
For our part, UNIFEM, the womens
fund of the United Nations, will be working with UN partners to
advocate for allocation of resources and expertise to strengthen
womens networks and ensure that that their needs and realities
are reflected in policies, practices, and resource allocations through
the phases of relief, recovery, and development.
The response to this devastation
must simultaneously address the urgency of the present and the inequalities
and injustices of the past. The special protection needs of women
and girls require attention, and the voices and perspectives of
women and women's support networks need to be given visibility in
national
strategies for relief and reconstruction, by aid organizations,
and by the media. By responding in this way, we can turn this crisis
into an opportunity for laying the foundations of a future where
all people can live with dignity, security, and justice.
www.unifem.org
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