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July 28, 2008 |
Addis-NWI Press release
Nobel Peace Laureate Women Call for Peace in Sudan
--July 28, 2008. (African Union, Addis Ababa, Ethiopia)
A delegation of the Nobel Women's Initiative, including Nobel Peace Laureates Wangari Maathai of Kenya and Jody Williams of the United States, and award-winning American actress-activist Mia Farrow, is looking forward to meeting with African Union Commissioner Jean Ping and AU Commissioner for Peace and Security Ramtene Lamamra. The delegation is calling for an immediate cessation of violence in Sudan's Darfur region, and full support for legitimate negotiations to build sustainable peace. Of paramount concern is the on-going, systematic violence against women and children including the use of rape as a weapon of war. To achieve these ends will require strong leadership from all African countries, with the support of the African Union and the international community.
The Nobel Women's Initiative delegation is in Africa as part of a three-week mission with stops in Thailand, the Thai-Burma border, Addis Ababa, South Sudan and the Chad-Darfur border.
The delegation commends the African Union for stepping forward to work actively in Darfur, and extends its condolences for the losses it has suffered in the region. The delegation calls for the international community to fully implement UN Resolution 1769, which allows for the full deployment of UN peacekeepers in Darfur.
The delegation is appealing to the President of Sudan to allow the resolution to be fully and rapidly implemented for the sake of the people of Sudan, in particular the people of Darfur. In 2005, at the UN World Summit, the resolution regarding the responsibility to protect was unanimously adopted, including by the Government of Sudan. The delegation is calling upon President Omar al Bashir to accept the responsibility to protect the people of Darfur, with the full support of the African Union and the international community.
The delegation is concerned about the practice of extracting resources from Sudan and indeed all of Africa in exchange for weapons that fuel conflicts and are the cause of untold suffering . It is calling upon the international community, particularly those who do business directly with African governments and consider themselves friends of Africa, to cease supplying weapons and work instead to build sustainable peace, human security and real development to benefit all the people of Africa.
Delegation members note that it is within these nations' considerable power to persuade Khartoum to cease their ongoing bombardments and ground attacks upon civilians and admit the full deployment of peacekeepers.
After leaving Addis, the delegation is going to South Sudan and refugee camps in Eastern Chad, along the border with Darfur. In their meetings with government, civil society and women's groups in Sudan and Chad, Professor Maathai and her colleagues are looking forward to listening to what the groups have to say, and plan to encourage them to continue the important work of pursuing peace despite all the challenges.
Representatives of the women's delegation explained the goals of their trip as follows:
1) To spotlight and raise awareness of the massive violations of women's human rights;
2) To reinforce efforts to bring about participatory governance in Sudan and Burma (and throughout the world); and
3) To call upon citizens around the world to take individual and collective action to build sustainable peace and to insist that the international community implement existing commitments for peace, justice and equality in Burma and Sudan.
The Nobel Women's Initiative was founded in 2006 by six Nobel Peace Laureates. Struck by increasing instability and gross violations of women's rights worldwide, the women laureates have brought together their extraordinary experiences to work for peace with justice and equality. Violence and repression in Sudan and Burma are among the focal issues for the Nobel Women's Initiative, in addition to women's rights in Iran, ongoing tensions between the U.S. and Iran, disarmaments and the gender dimensions of climate change.