United Nations:India has underscored the urgent need to institutionalize involvement of women in conflict prevention and post-conflict reconstruction, lamenting their exclusion from negotiations during peace processes despite their noted contributions to peacebuilding.
First Secretary in India's Permanent Mission to the UN Paulomi Tripathi noted that the majority of peace agreements signed in the last three decades have no women signatories and a vast majority of peace agreements fail to reference women and address their concerns, such as gender-based violence.
"Despite recognition of women's contributions to preventing, resolving conflicts and post-conflict reconstruction, they are often excluded from negotiations during peace processes," Tripathi said Monday at Peacebuilding Commission's Ambassadorial Level Meeting on Strengthening Linkages between Women, Peace and Security & Peacebuilding and Sustaining Peace'.
"There is an urgent need to institutionalize the involvement of women in conflict prevention and post-conflict reconstruction. This requires not only normative advice but also commitment, capacity and institution building at the ground level, she said.
Tripathi noted that women also play an active role in providing early warning signals and prevent the escalation of violence, in countering violent extremism and in addressing conflict-related sexual violence.
"Women's participation in peacebuilding promotes human rights and social justice, enables better monitoring of the implementation of formal peace agreements, transparency, and anti-corruption mechanisms," she said.
She emphasized the need to prioritize greater participation of women in UN peacekeeping to promote gender responsiveness.