Fokus på kvinders sikkerhed i katastrofesituationer

Laurits Holdt

Når den store nødhjælpsmaskine ruller ud er fokus på de store linjer – at få forsyningerne ind, teltene op, find vand og få maden delt ud. Men basal sikkerhed for udsatte grupper – f.eks. kvinder – er lige så vigtigt, siger FNs flygtningechef.

LONDON, 14 November 2013 (IRIN): As the leaders of the international aid world gathered in London’s Lancaster House to discuss the protection of women and girls in emergencies, the devastation caused by Typhoon Haiyan in the Philippines was on everyone’s mind.

Women and girls in storm-hit areas, some the only survivors of their families, are struggling to receive basic aid in a situation of deteriorating security; this, speakers said, is the moment when responders need to be providing protection – right from the very start of the emergency.

The meeting, a high-level event for governments, UN agencies, international NGOs and civil society, was meant to reach an agreement on a “fundamental new approach to protecting girls and women in emergency situations, both man-made and natural disasters.”

But UN High Commissioner for Refugees Antonio Guterres spoke of how difficult it had been to change working culture in the field, to make staff understand that protection is an essential part of humanitarian work.

“We need to do something very strong to change the psychological attitudes of our staff on the ground,” he said. “In emergencies, people tend to say, ‘The important thing is to save lives – move the trucks, bring the tents, find the water, distribute the food.’ But the truth is that just as important as that is to make sure that key protection concerns are put at the centre of emergency response.”

Changing how aid is provided

Keeping this in mind affects the way temporary accommodation is designed. For example, women’s safety is improved when they have access to separate sanitation facilities with privacy and lockable doors, and when they do not have to take long, dark walks to use the toilets at night.

Similarly, women’s security is improved when they have cooking facilities that do not require them to travel long distances, into isolated areas, in search of firewood.

These considerations affect how aid is organized.

World Food Programme Executive Director Ertharin Cousin – who left the meeting early to fly to the Philippines – spoke passionately about the need to get food distribution right.

“If it’s a food drop, we know that women can’t get to the food fast enough, and as a result what happens is that they are forced to make tough decisions about what they will give the men in return for food. If it’s a voucher distribution, we have to protect women so that they receive the vouchers, because too often, if the vouchers go to the men, the women are forced to compromise themselves to get the vouchers they need to provide food for their children.”

These issues also affect what gets put onto the planes delivering aid. Among the items the UK is sending to the Philippines are solar lanterns that can charge mobile phones. The lanterns make women feel more secure after dark and enable them to call for help if they feel threatened.

Several speakers addressed the need to include reproductive health services in emergency situations – including safe abortion for victims of rape. While abortion was not mentioned in the final communiqué, Justine Greening, the UK secretary of state for international development, said:

“It’s absolutely vital that we provide the life-saving services that women actually need, as opposed to those that we might feel most comfortable providing. Contraception, prevention and treatment of HIV and other sexually transmitted infections, and safe abortion are life-saving services. And yet they are often ignored in humanitarian responses.”

The London meeting produced a communiqué stressing the commitment of all parties to strengthen efforts to protect girls and women and to create a safer environment for them during and after conflict and natural disasters.

It also produced a detailed, 10-page work plan, in which governments, agencies and NGOs in attendance put their names to specific promises and actions: to forestall violence, to increase the numbers of specialist staff, to improve capacity, and to support survivors of rape and violence.

Threat of sexual violence

Læs hele artiklen: http://www.irinnews.org/report/99118/getting-protection-for-women-right-in-emergencies