- Mobilize a collective action and show the video “Celebrating Women’s Resistance,” a short film tribute to women human rights defenders who have been killed in defense of human rights. You can download the video clip in English, French and Spanish from the women human rights defenders campaign website: www.defendingwomen-defendingrights.org;
- Organize a local or national award for women human rights defenders at risk or women activists who have made significant contributions to human rights advocacy in your locality or country;
- Nominate or support women human rights defenders for an international award in recognition for their defense and promotion of women’s rights and human rights, such as the Martin Ennals Award for Human Rights Defenders;
- Organize national and international gathering for women human rights defenders such as the international event organized for the Gerwani women human rights defenders of 1965 which will be hosted by Komnas Perempuan on November 29, 2006 in Jakarta, Indonesia;
- Support or continue to support action alerts on women human rights defenders;
- Conduct local or national consultations on women human rights defenders among women and other activists in your locality or country, such as the one planned by Women’s Rehabilitation Centre (WOREC) and others in Kathmandu, Nepal also on November 29, 2006;
- Create your own activity or initiative on women human rights defenders and let us know about it!
You can check the women human rights defenders campaign website at
www.defendingwomen-defendingrights.org
for videos, action alerts, reports and other materials you can use to celebrate
International Women Human Rights Defenders Day on November 29th!
Let us know of your November 29th activities and we can post it on the website, too! Contact Lisa Pusey, Programme Officer, Asia Pacific Forum on Women, Law and Development (APWLD) at
lisa@apwld.org.
Center for Women’s Global Leadership
Rutgers University, 160 Ryders Lane, New Brunswick, NJ 08901-8555 USA
Phone (1-732) 932-8782, Fax: (1-732) 932-1180
E-mail:
cwgl@igc.org
http://www.cwgl.rutgers.edu
Innabuyog’s Statement on the 16 days of activism to end violence against women
29 November 2006
State Violence is Violence Against Women
Every year, women’s movements all over the world commemorate November 25 to December 10 as 16 days of activism to end violence against women. This activism is inspired by the tragic death of the three Mirabal sisters labelled as Mariposas (the Butterflies) in the Dominican Republic on 25 November 1960 during the dictatorial rule of General Raphael Leonides Trujillo. Twenty one years later, on 25 November 1981, women from Latin America gathered in indignation in Bogota, Colombia to declare November 25 as International Day to End Violence Against Women.
Women’s movements all over the world has taken this occasion as a period to register and resist the many faces of violence against women. Violence against women continues to be a daily experience despite the adoption of the Convention on the Elimination of all Forms of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) by the UN on December 18, 1979.
In the Philippines, GABRIELA as a national women’s alliance actively brought this campaign in the streets, plazas, factories, schools, churches, offices and communities to educate and mobilize women on the many forms of violence as a result of the prevailing feudal-patriarchal and western-decadent culture in the country being perpetrated by the state. At present state violence is felt through heightened political repression which is happening to its worst through execution of women, their husbands and children whose known involvement is promoting the rights and interest of the people. The women victims are mostly peasants involved in struggles to defend their rights to land, life and natural resources.
Since Mrs. Arroyo assumed power in 2001, there are 83 women and 54 children killed. Most of them are known leaders or members of organizations affiliated with GABRIELA, Gabriela Women’s Partylist and other progressive people’s organizations. Most of the children are killed during massacre of families and communities in the course of militarization. Some of them are unborn, who get killed with mothers assassinated by death squads of the state. Adding to this appalling data are cases of enforced disappearances. 27 women and 10 children are victims of enforced disappearance since 2001. Their bodies have not been located and the possibility of them killed is high. Perpetrators are no other but members of the state’s police, military forces and para-military groups. Disappearance is a torturing incident for relatives and friends knowing no end of their suffering. It’s a relief for families to find the remains of their relative and provide them a decent burial.
In the Cordillera, the political assassination of Pepe Manegdeg, Albert Terredano, Rafael Bangit and Alyce Omengan Claver have left 3 widows and a widower and orphaned 11 children with age ranging from 3 to 17.
We take this year’s celebration to gather women, men and the youth to a forum to discuss State Violence as Violence Against Women. This will be held in the University of the Philippines College Baguio at 2:00 to 4:00 in the afternoon on 5 December 2006.
This will also be an occasion to launch the Remember Alyce Campaign which is Innabuyog’s campaign to stop further violence against women through political persecution and killings under GMA’s Oplan Bantay Laya (Freedom Watch). This is Innabuyog’s campaign to make the public aware of the immense impact of political killings to women and their communities. Hence, the important involvement of women in the quest for justice for women victims and other victims of political persecution and execution. Alyce Omengan Claver, is the first indigenous woman victim of political killing from the Cordillera. She sustained multiple gunshots when their family car was ambushed by Arroyo’s death squad aboard a van in the morning of 31 July 2006. Her husband, Dr. Chandu Claver and 11 year old daughter survived. Alyce is well remembered as a student activist, a volunteer staff of the Manila office of the Cordillera Peoples Alliance in the 80s, a dependable sister, mother, wife, woman and human rights defender who is ever willing to extend her heart and hand for activists and people’s organizations.
The provincial chapters of Innabuyog will be holding similar educational fora jointly with people’s organizations and justice and peace formations in the provinces.
Only desperate and insecured regimes, like that of Arroyo, resort to manslaughter to be able to hold on to power. As we call for an end to the senseless political killings in this year’s 16 days of activism to end violence against women, we should carry out our task in educating, organizing and mobilizing women and pursue with ousting Mrs. Arroyo from Malacanang.