Feminist
International Radio Endeavor (FIRE)
Women's
International News Gathering Service (WINGS)
Women
Living Under Muslim Laws (WLUML)
Women´s
PEACECAST V: In Search of Justice, Human Rights and a Just Peace:
Women
Activists of the network Women Living Under Muslim Laws (WLUML) discuss
these issues
in a live interactive web-cast discussion at
October 16 - 18, 2001
Topic
of discussion: Focusing on the tragic and horrific events of September
11, 2001 in the United States, participants stressed the pressing need
for peace, justice, political restraint, and commitment to respect of all
human rights. They explored the root causes of such heinous terrorist acts
from a multiplicity of perspectives-- politics, economics, development,
democracy, human rights, feminism, and peace.
The
Women´s PEACECASTS Project grew from several existing ideas and projects
to rise to the occasion of the attack September 11 on the United States.
From a initial core of participants, it is designed to expand outward and
involve many and varied women in discussion across boundaries of nations,
groups, philosophies, and also languages.
Marieme
Helie-Lucas, from Algeria, feminist scholar,
women´s human rights activist, founding memberof
WLUML.
Ayesha
Iman, women's
human rights activist from Nigeria, who is executive director of BAOBAB
for Women's Human Rights which focuses on developing knowledge of, access
to and extension of women's rights in religious, customary and secular
laws in Nigeria. She
is alsothe
regional coordinator for Africa and Middle East of WLUML, a
researcher in women's studies and gender analysis, and has lectured
in universities in Nigeria, the UK and Canada.
Farida Shaheed from Pakistan is member of the group Shirkat Gah (Place of Participation) in Pakistan. Shirkat Gah is a women's rights organization in Pakistan that conducts research, advocacy, and education to assert women's human rights. Farida is also a member of Women Living Under Muslim Laws.
Lynn
Freedmanfrom
the USA
is human rights activist and lawyer and professor of Public Health at Columbia
University in New York.
___________________________________________________________________________________________________________
Women
Living Under Muslim Laws
We know that indiscriminate violence and terrorism
by state and non-state actors are a global phenomenon. We are particularly
aware of the human cost of terrorism and war frequently perpetrated in
the name of religion or belief systems. However we regard all of these
as assaults on the principle of respect for civilian life.
Vengeance is not Justice
Violence cannot eradicate terrorism. Many people
in our communities are deeply distressed by these events but many are at
the same time also angered by the poverty and deprivation, injustice and
exploitation they experience; they are also angered by domestic and foreign
policies that they perceive to be hypocritical. All of this can fuel extreme
and violent attitudes. Ending terrorism requires addressing the roots of
global inequality.
Misguided Retaliation?
And yet the current focus of retaliation is
against one person and one country. If the US is talking about taking action
against "those harboring terrorists" it should consider that the US and
the UK have both become safe havens for those who openly advocate violence
against those who do not share their opinions. For example, Anouar Haddam,
a leader of the Algerian Islamic Salvation Front, is currently seeking
asylum in the US and numerous
We are concerned that legitimate grief is being
exploited as a cover for increased military spending - weapons that are
aimed mainly at civilian populations. Such military action will cause further
suffering to civilians elsewhere. After 20 years of war, Afghanistan is
already destroyed while the intended "targets" have fled. Furthermore,
Bin Laden and the Taliban
The Consequences
www.wluml.org/english/new-archives/wtc/wluml-statements.htm
FIRE
– Feminist International Radio Endeavour (FIRE) PO
Box 239, Ciudad Colón,Costa
Rica. tel
fax 5062491319 WINGS
– Women´s International News Gathering Service
(512)416-9000
WLUML
- international solidarity network
International Solidarity Network
Statement on the attacks in
the USA, 21 September 2001
The network Women Living Under Muslim Laws
(WLUML) wishes to extend its deepest condolences to the aggrieved, their
families and the people of America following the crimes against humanity
that were committed on 11 September 2001. Our sorrow is particularly heartfelt
because many of those linked through the WLUML network have directly experienced
terror and the devastation that goes with it. And also because of our links
of solidarity with allies in the women's movements and other progressive
people in the US.
We urge the US and their allies not to pursue
fruitless retaliation with military force. The world must focus on transparent
investigation and bring the perpetrators to justice under the principles
of international law through an appropriate forum such as an International
Criminal Court (ICC).
It is WLUML's experience that terrorism in
the name of Islam is a trans-national force. Politico-religious movements
across the world are reinforcing each other through funding, military training,
educational exchanges, joint international lobbying, etc. The profound
impact on women can be seen, for example, through restrictions on access
to education and limitations imposed on freedom of movement as well as
changes in family laws that severely curtail women's legal rights.
politico-religious extremists are operating
out of the UK. Human rights concepts such as freedom of expression have
been misused by some international human rights organisations as well as
manipulated by governments and co-opted by politico-religious extremists,
thereby giving unwarranted space and credibility to such views. Also Saudi
Arabia has been bankrolling extremist Madrassahs in Pakistan where many
Taliban supporters are being trained. It should be remembered that Bin
Laden and the Taliban emerged in the context of Cold War confrontation
and the vacuum of its aftermath. Global reaction should not be determined
by US political and economic interests alone.
are not Afghanistan.
The demonising of 'the other' has already
increased, resulting in violent attacks on innocent individuals. Talk of
'crusades' is buying into the agenda of the perpetrators, at the risk of
world war. Already the situation has given public exposure to previously
unheard of fringe groups. And already there have been moves towards sweeping
restrictions on civil liberties under the guise of this crisis. In those
countries which will bear the brunt of any military action, the space for
alternative positions will vanish. People may find themselves forced to
make choices which they had no say in formulating. Any military action
will de-stabilise an already unstable and nuclearised region. Women in
Muslim countries and communities in particular may suffer the direct impact
of militarisation and a potential backlash from politico-religious movements.
P.O. Box 33220
Austin TX 78764 USA
wings@wings.org
Email: wluml@wluml.org
WWW: www.wluml.org