ISLAMABAD: Pakistan’s foreign minister Bilawal Bhutto-Zardari described women as primary victims of conflict while addressing an open debate on “Women, Peace and Security” at the United Nations Security Council on Tuesday.
Addressing the gathering on the eve of International Women's Day on March 8, the minister paid tribute to the world body for granting a larger role to women peacekeepers in conflict zones, saying it had “visibly contributed in preventing and containing crimes against women.”
However, he maintained the international community required to do a great deal more to address the plight of women bearing the brunt of violence in different parts of the world.
“The sombre reality is that women continue to be the principal victims of war and conflict,” he said in a statement. “We hear the cries of mothers, sisters and daughters in Iraq, Afghanistan, Ukraine and Africa, suffering from the consequences of wars that were imposed on them.”
Bhutto-Zardari maintained the world was yet to implement the strategy to prevent wars, erase its suffering, establish accountability for the crimes against women and girls and empower them.
He expressed disappointment with the restrictions imposed on women by the Taliban regime in Afghanistan, saying there was nothing in religion that stopped a woman from receiving education or working to secure their well-being.
He also highlighted “egregious violations of women’s rights” in areas under occupation.
This, he said, was “manifested most vividly in the occupied Palestinian territories and occupied Jammu and Kashmir.”
The Pakistani minister pointed out the world was facing a “pandemic of conflict, violence, war, hate, extremism and terrorism,” adding that civilians continued to suffer despite the Geneva Conventions offering them protection.
Commenting on the situation, Sima Bahous, the executive director of UN Women, said women were mostly underrepresented at diplomatic negotiations despite enduring disproportionate suffering due to conflict and violence.
“We must recall that we have neither significantly changed the composition of peace tables, nor the impunity enjoyed by those who commit atrocities against women and girls,” she said.
She also criticized the Taliban for “gender apartheid” in Afghanistan where, she said, women were left out of public life.
“Afghanistan is one of the most extreme examples of regression in women’s rights, but it is far from being the only one,” Bahous said.