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Socialist International
Women,
sharing the common position adopted by the UN Fourth World
Conference on Women, which states that "the human rights
of women are an inalienable, integral and indivisible part of
fundamental human rights and must be recognised and safeguarded
throughout the world in all communities", without any exceptions
based on ethnicity, geography, culture, religion etc;
convinced that
women and women's movements must play a decisive role for peace
and security in the economic and civil development of the Mediterranean
area;
preoccupied
by the fact that ethnic, religious and social conflicts currently
taking place in a number of countries in this region particularly
affect women, women's movements, humanitarian associations and
those which assist dispossessed women and the victims of violence;
denouncing,
in particular, the fact that in Algeria these difficulties are
compounded by the systematic persecution of women by terrorist
groups through rape, torture, kidnapping and murder and the persecution
of women as citizens - through the lack of democracy, the existence
of authoritarian codes and laws that diminish women, denying their
right to self-expression, to the enjoyment of their plural languages
and cultures, as well as their right to freedom of information,
through the institutionalised censorship of the media;
believes
- in the need to fight
for peace, for dialogue between states, citizens and civilisations,
to fight any violation or denial of citizens' rights and the
division of the population of the two shores of the Mediterranean
into first and second class citizens;
- that the recognition
of rights of citizenship for women of foreign nationality who
have emigrated to European countries is crucial in order to
efficiently defend women's rights on the Mediterranean's southern
shores;
- that making and
strengthening contacts between women's organisations in Mediterranean
countries is crucial in order to promote both the development
of civil society and the empowerment of women;
- that coordination,
communication, information and training are the foundations
for cooperation among women on the Mediterranean's northern
and southern shores.
We ask that
all signatories of the Euro-mediterranean agreement undersign
and/or ratify the UN Convention on the Elimination of All Forms
of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW) and also all UN Human
Rights Instruments and that of the International Labour Organisation
(ILO).
We ask national
governments and the European Union
- to act politically
and provide economic resources to strengthen women's organisations;
- to build a gender-sensitive
viewpoint on problems relating to development;
- to promote a strategy
of cooperation enacted not only by governments but also by women's
NGOs and other voluntary organisations.
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