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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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?????????????????????????????????????????????????Thursday, October 25, 2018
Palestinian women have 'meaningful role to play', says lawyer ahead of UN address
Siniora,
who will be first Palestinian woman campaigner to address Security
Council, tells MEE Palestinian women 'bear the brunt' of occupation
Randa Siniora is director of Women's Center for Legal Aid and Counselling (MEE/James Reinl)
Wednesday 24 October 2018
UNITED NATIONS – Civil
rights lawyer Randa Siniora will make history this week when she becomes
the first Palestinian woman campaigner to address the United Nations
Security Council.
Siniora,
director of the Women's Center for Legal Aid and Counselling, a
Palestinian rights group, will address the top UN body on Thursday
during a debate on rape, trauma and other challenges faced by women in
Syria, Congo, Yemen and other conflict zones.
Her
address has been lauded as a rare chance for a Palestinian campaigner
to speak to a global audience, especially as US President Donald Trump’s
peace-making efforts in the Middle East often sideline Palestinian
voices.
In an interview with Middle East Eye, Siniora said Palestinian women have not only been shot during demonstrations and stoned to death by Israeli settlers, but they are also the ones who pick up the pieces when families are torn apart.
“We’re
talking about the whole range of violations compounded with the
traditional roles of women in the household, which creates another layer
of oppression that women have to suffer under the occupation,” Siniora
told MEE.
Examples of repression
Siniora, a UK-educated lawyer from Jerusalem who has worked on legal rights for the past three decades, said she will use her time at the UN to provide envoys with concrete examples of life under Israeli occupation.
One such case is that of Mirvat, a
35-year-old Palestinian woman from Hebron, in the West Bank, who was
attacked by a mob of Israeli settlers while putting out her trash in
January.
The gang of young settlers beat her so badly that Mirvat, who was four months pregnant at the time, miscarried, said Siniora. Despite alerting police, Mirvat, who doesn't want her full name revealed, says no one was prosecuted for the violence.
'Women bear the brunt of the hardships of Israeli colonisation and the structured patriarchy of Palestinian society'-Randa Siniora, lawyer
Others have suffered at demonstrations that have taken place across Gaza since March.
Siniora highlighted the case of
Alaa, 15, who was hit in the back by an exploding bullet during a
protest at the al-Bureij boundary post with Israel in July. Her injuries
have left her unable to walk or sleep properly, Siniora said.
In
the lead-up to the UN meeting, Siniora has also pushed for greater UN
scrutiny of Israel and Palestine under a mechanism called the Informal
Expert Group, but noted that the 15-member council, on which Israel’s
ally, the United States, has veto powers, was unwilling to take that
step.
Siniora’s criticism will be aimed not only at Israeli officials, but at the male-dominated Palestinian Authority (PA), as well.
She said the PA barely includes
women in the day-to-day running of the territory and it doesn't allow
women near the negotiating table with foreign envoys. “Women bear the brunt of the hardships of Israeli colonisation and the structured patriarchy of Palestinian society,” she said.
Need for woman voices
Anna
Tonelli, a conflict expert at global charity Oxfam International,
called for greater inclusion of women in discussions on the
Israeli-Palestinian conflict.
“It’s
critical that women like Randa are included in this dialogue because
Palestinian women continue to endure the worst impact of the Israeli
occupation,” Tonelli told MEE.
“Despite
their higher educational levels, they fare worse than men in the labour
market, in political participation and leadership.”
Palestinian
President Mahmoud Abbas has turned to the UN and other international
institutions after Trump moved US embassy to Jerusalem (Reuters/File
photo)
Siniora’s
address comes at a time when Palestinian officials struggle to get
their message across in the face of a White House that appears to
totally favour Israel.
Since
taking power in January 2017, Trump has halted funding for Palestinian
refugees, shuttered the Palestinian diplomatic outpost in Washington and
recognised Jerusalem as Israel’s capital, moving the US embassy there.
That
move reversed longstanding US policy, sparked global outrage, and
finally, led PA President Mahmoud Abbas and his officials to boycott
peace efforts led by Jared Kushner, Trump’s senior adviser and
son-in-law.
Turning to UN
Palestinian
officials have tried to get around the deadlocked negotiations by
taking their case to the UN, with Abbas delivering impassioned speeches
to the Security Council in February and the 193-nation General Assembly
in September.
Abbas
also announced plans to upgrade Palestine’s status at the UN to full
membership and, in May, Foreign Minister Riyad al-Maliki asked
International Criminal Court (ICC) prosecutors to launch a full probe
into alleged Israeli abuses on Palestinian soil.
The Palestinian push for international recognition received a boost earlier this month when Palestine was elected at the UN General Assembly as chair of a group 77 developing states, known as G77.
The
resolution granting Palestine the right to be the G77 chair for 2019
was backed by 146 UN member states. Only the US, Israel and Australia
voted against the measure.
READ MORE ►
Jonathan
Cristol, a scholar at Adelphi University, said he was not surprised
that the PA was attempting an “end run” around Washington, but that the
chances of success were slim.
“The
US remains the key outside player in this conflict. Maybe the other
permanent Security Council members can assume a more prominent role, but
ultimately the multilateral institution route will not end the
occupation nor lead to full UN membership,” Cristol told MEE.
Despite
these challenges, Siniora intends to take the stage at the Security
Council to bring attention to critical and too-often overlooked topics:
the suffering of women in war and the ways in which they can be at the
forefront of positive change.
“Women have to be part of
mediation, reconciliation and peace-building in our region," she said.
"Across the Middle East, women have a meaningful role to play, they have
to be engaged, and they can perhaps change the rules of the game.”

