Women are, literally and
figuratively, on the frontlines of the many conflicts raging in Myanmar, but
are prevented from participating in the peace process in any substantial way.
This year I have travelled around Myanmar meeting women from ethnic minority
and majority communities to understand why they aren’t included, and what
issues and insecurities they encounter. This is what they told me.
Often,
because women tend to be responsible for the wellbeing of their children, they
can’t attend meetings and other political events unless they receive extra
funding. This money is needed to cover the cost of babysitting or travel costs
for children and child-minders. Another problem is that when meetings
are held in major cities or abroad, women without identity documentation living
in rural communities are effectively excluded from participating.
Problematically,
the international community tends to limit its meetings to women who can travel
or who are well known already and speak good English. The government on the
other hand typically only engages with women who speak Burmese, thus excluding
women who speak only minority languages. Funding must, therefore, include
generous translation and travel costs to enable women from minority communities
to attend meetings and receive information in their ethnic languages to make
informed decisions.
Worryingly,
women frequently experience physical obstruction to their
participation. I have been told that male leaders might leave the room or remove
their hearing aids when women present. Meetings to engage in political dialogue
are sometimes held in areas women are told it is too dangerous for them to
travel to. Women are also typically invited at very late notice to meetings,
meaning that if they go, they are unable to prepare properly. Consequently, at
a minimum, the date, time and location of the meeting must be announced with
due notice – and with women’s input – so that they have time to prepare
themselves and take care of their family responsibilities.
The
leaders of many of the ethnic armed groups simply do not think that political
issues are relevant to women, and they impose arbitrary qualifications for
participation in the peace process. One example of this is stipulating a
minimum number of years’ military involvement as a prerequisite for
participation. This results in disqualifying women from participation because
they tend to leave the army when they get married.
The
Government has made even less of an effort to include women. At the most recent
21st Century Panglong Conference, the
Government’s delegation was 92 per cent male. Women’s groups were invited
to be observers only. It seems that despite women and men both participating in
and experiencing wars in many ways, only men get to use their experience as
grounds for contributing to the peace processes. This is concerning as violence
against women is ultimately rooted in women’s inequality in accessing justice,
leadership and decision-making opportunities.
Of
course, norms framing men as being natural leaders don’t help either. This
means that when women do get invited to participate in peace talks or political
discussions, they are typically requested to do the cooking or decorating for
the event. Although some women do get asked to provide substantial input –
well-known examples of this include Mi Sue Pwint from the All Burma Students Democratic
Front and Nang Raw Zakhung from the Nyein Foundation
– a critical mass constituting a minimum of 30 per cent women is needed to
enable effective change. This must be operationalised throughout the political
dialogue, without exception.
Earlier
this year I travelled to Kachin State, where currently about 87,000 people are fleeing conflict.
The impact on Kachin women and girls has been particularly stark: local
organisations I met with report an increase in forced marriages and the
trafficking of young women and girls. Weekly skirmishes
are taking place in Shan State, where both medical aid and food supplies have
been restricted from reaching internally displaced people camps – where mostly
women and children live – since July this year.
Meanwhile,
in Rakhine State, discrimination against the Rohingya community has resulted in
women experiencing rape and other forms of sexual violence
perpetrated by members of the Myanmar Army. Recently women from Karenni
communities told me about how increased militarisation and widespread drug use
in their areas have led to an upsurge in rape and sexual harassment.
Unfortunately, the continued exclusion of women from key decision-making
processes means that these concerns are not heard or accounted for in any
meaningful way.
Last
month’s United Nations Security Council meeting on Women, Peace and Security once
again reaffirmed the crucial role women play in efforts towards achieving
peace. It is time that the Myanmar government, the leadership of the ethnic
armed organisations and those in the international community supporting current
peace efforts in the country realise that women’s equal and meaningful
participation in transitions from conflict to peace is the most important, and
yet most overlooked, component for achieving a peace that is not only
sustainable but lasting and just. As Tin
Tin Nyo, from the Burmese Women’s Union, so succinctly put it:
without women, there will be no peace.
Jenny Hedström is a PhD student at Monash
University and the editor of International IDEA’s report Women in Conflict and Peace, available in
English and Myanmar (selected chapters). The views expressed in this article
are the author’s and do not necessarily represent the views of International
IDEA, its Board or its Council Members.
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