UNITED NATIONS — Muslim and Western nations overcame deep divisions to agree on a landmark United Nations code to combat violence against women and girls.

Iran, Libya, Sudan and other Muslim nations ended threats to block the declaration and agreed to language stating that violence against women could not be justified by "any custom, tradition or religious consideration."

Western nations, particularly from Scandinavia, toned down demands for references to gay rights and sexual health rights to secure the accord after two weeks of tense negotiations between the 193 UN member states.

Some 6,000 non-government groups were in New York for the Commission on the Status of Women meeting. Cheers and wild applause erupted when the accord was announced in the UN headquarters late Friday.

Michelle Bachelet, executive director of UN Women, said it had been an "historic" meeting. It was announced straight after that Bachelet would be leaving her post to return to Chile.

"People worldwide expected action, and we didn't fail them. Yes -- we did it," Bachelet said.

UN leader Ban Ki-Moon said UN members had committed "to take action to prevent violence and provide justice and services to survivors" of violence against women, which he called a "global menace" and "moral outrage."

Iran, the Vatican and Russia and other Muslim states had formed what some diplomats had called "an unholy alliance" to weaken a statement calling for tough global standards on violence against women and girls.

They had objected to references to abortion rights and language suggesting that rape includes forcible behavior by a woman's husband or partner.

Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood had called the proposed UN document un-Islamic and warned it would lead to the "complete degradation of society."

But the chief Egyptian official at the meeting, Mervat Tallawy, head of the country's National Women's Council, backed the accord. She said the declaration was needed to counter "a global wave of conservatism, of repression against women."

With Norway and Denmark leading a European alliance with North America calling for tough language, right up to the final hours it had appeared that the meeting could end without an accord.

The last attempt by the UN commission to agree a declaration on violence against women in 2003 ended in failure.

"The commission urges states to strongly condemn all forms of violence against women and girls and to refrain from invoking any custom, tradition or religious consideration to avoid their obligations with respect to its elimination," said the declaration.

It added that states should "devote particular attention to abolishing practices and legislation that discriminate against women and girls, or perpetuate and condone violence against them."

Countries should "address and eliminate as a matter of priority domestic violence," went on the declaration.

The conference had been made more emotive by the Taliban attack in October on 15-year-old Malala Yousafzai for her promotion of girls' education in Pakistan and widely publicized gang rapes in India and South Africa.

The United States welcomed the accord. It was an important first step to ensure that women and girls "live productive and safe lives, free from the scourge of violence and abuse," senior US envoy Terri Robl told the meeting.

But she added that "some important aspects" were omitted from the document and the United States believes the declaration should have clearly stated that it applied to lesbian women. "We regret that some delegations prevented this recognition explicitly," Robl said.

Germany's UN ambassador Peter Wittig said the document was "balanced and strong." Wittig tweeted that the declaration "sends a much needed message to the women around the world: your rights are crucial."

Copyright © 2013 AFP.

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'One step more for realizing the rights and dignity of women and girls'

By Johanna Morden
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Women (94K)

18 March 2013: In a historic move, 131 U.N. member states have joined hands with cross-sector groups to thwart violence against all women and girls.

The agreement was sealed at the 57th session of the Commission on the Status of Women held recently in New York, United States, after over two weeks of close negotiations between participants.

Thousands of representatives from member states, U.N. partners, civil society, international governmental organizations and the private sector came together to produce an outcome document summarizing the global plan to prevent and eliminate all forms of violence against women and girls.

According to information from the U.N. Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women, the plan calls for “increased attention and accelerated action for prevention and response.”

U.N. Women has detailed the important focus the plan gives to the prevention of violence, chiefly through providing education, raising awareness and addressing gender inequalities in the social, economic and political realms.

The plan prioritizes the protection of sexual and reproductive health rights, as well as the creation of multisectoral services for survivors of violence, it said. These services include those for health, and psychological support and counseling.

The plan also underscores the need for punishing perpetrators, and enhancing the means of collecting evidence and responding to victims.

“We will work with member states to turn the agreed conclusions of the Commission on the Status of Women into concrete results for women and girls,” said U.N. Women in a statement.

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Muslim Brotherhood backlash against UN declaration on women rights

UN's call to end violence against women would lead to disintegration of Muslim society, says Egypt's ruling party

Patrick Kingsley in Cairo
The Guardian
Source

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Friday 15 March 2013: Egypt's Muslim Brotherhood have claimed that a UN declaration calling for an end to violence against women will lead to the "complete disintegration of society".

Delegates at the UN's Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) in New York have spent the last fortnight debating the wording of a declaration that would condemn violence against women. The brotherhood, whose close allies control Egypt's parliament and presidency, slated the declaration in an online statement on Thursday – calling it a decadent and destructive document that undermined Islamic ethics by calling for women to work, travel and use contraception without their husbands' permission.

In a 10-point memorandum, the brotherhood also criticised the declaration for granting women sexual freedom, allowing Muslim women to marry non-Muslims, granting equal rights to homosexual people, and allowing wives full legal rights to take their husbands to court for marital rape.

"This declaration, if ratified, would lead to complete disintegration of society, and would certainly be the final step in the intellectual and cultural invasion of Muslim countries, eliminating the moral specificity that helps preserve cohesion of Islamic societies," the brotherhood 's statement claimed. .......more

 

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