Statement by Ms. Nava ARAD
Prime Minister's Advisor on the Status of Women
Head of Delegation
on
"Preparations for the Fourth World Conference on Women:
Action for Equality, Development and Peace"
(Agenda Item 3)
Commission of the Status of Women
United Nations
16 March 1995
New York
Madame Chairperson,
I have the honour to speak on behalf of the Government of Israel.
Allow me to take this opportunity to congratulate on your election
as Chairperson, and wish you success in the discharge of your
duties.
At the outset, I wish to express our appreciation to Ms. Mongella
for her dedication and for the important contribution she has
already made, even before the Beijing Conference on the Advancement
of Women.
The Fourth UN World Conference on Women will be convening in
Beijing to secure "Equality, Development and Peace Looking at
the World Through Women's Eyes." This World Conference must bring
about a real breakthrough in advancing the status of women, both on
the national and international levels.
One of the central lessons of the Nairobi Conference has to be that
we can no longer make do with "platforms for action" alone. We must
also ensure the creation of tools to follow-up their realization.
For too many years, governments and international economic
institutions have paid little more than lip service to their
commitment to advance the status of women. At the Beijing
Conference, we must not only seek government declarations, but we
must also safeguard specific commitments for their implementation,
including budgetary allocations.
As Advisor to the Prime Minister on the Status of Women, it is my
duty to coordinate and direct my Government's treatment of all
issues connected with the status of women in Israel, in the spheres
of legislation, policy and administration.
Towards the Beijing Conference, Prime Minister Yitzhak Rabin
expressed his Government's commitment to the advancement of women,
by announcing that a government bill would be submitted to the
Knesset, Israel's parliament, to guarantee the establishment of a
statutory authority for the advancement of women. Its task will be
to implement, nurture and follow up all aspects of this important
sphere of activity within the Prime Minister's office. The
authority will be independent, will operate under its own budget,
and will serve as an ombudsman to address public concerns.
Towards the Beijing Conference, we have decided to convene tens of
thousands of Jewish and Arab women, in order to determine the
agenda for women in Israel for the decade following Beijing.
In November 1994, we convened the International Jewish Leaders'
Conference towards Beijing. In the Jerusalem Declaration, adopted
at the Conference's close, we welcomed the advancement of the peace
process in the Middle East, the signing of the peace treaty with
the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan, and the Declaration of Principles
with the PLO. We hope that these will be followed by a
comprehensive peace in the region.
We recognized the pioneering efforts of women in creating the
positive atmosphere for peace in the Middle East, and urged the
inclusion of women in all levels of the peace negotiations.
We condemned all forms of terrorism, racism, anti-semitism,
fundamentalism and xenophobia.
Recognizing that women's rights are human rights, we condemned all
forms of violence against women, and demanded that governments
implement and fund policies to combat and eliminate all forms of
discrimination against women.
We recommended the extension of the partnership between men and
women to safeguard equal participation of women in decision-making
at all levels of society in order to secure women's empowerment.
We called upon governments to combat the feminization of poverty,
and to facilitate the access of all women to the labor market. This
will enable them to secure equal pay for work of equal value and to
be remunerated for unpaid work.
We demanded that affirmative action policies to secure equality for
women be initiated and implemented in the governmental, public and
private sectors. We stated that the family in all its forms is the
basic unit of society and, as such, should be a model of equality.
All forms of inequality, both within the family and before the
courts, must be addressed. The family is entitled to receive
comprehensive protection and support.
Everyone has the right to enjoy the highest attainable standard of
physical and mental health.
States should take all appropriate measures to ensure women's
universal access to health care services, including those related
to reproductive rights, which include family planning and sexual
health.
We recognized that education and training are important keys to
achieving gender equality and women's economic independence, and
must be a priority concern when distributing resources.
We urged the encouragement and development of younger leadership
within women's organizations and firmly suggested that their
delegations to the Beijing Conference consist of at least 20% young
women.
We recognized the role of women in safeguarding the environment, in
reducing consumption and in the achievement of sustainable
development.
We emphasized our appreciation for the contribution made by NGO's,
and their partnership with governments in impacting legislation on
behalf of women. We urged that the NGO's participate in monitoring
and implementing the Beijing platform of action.
On February 26, 1995, for the first time in Israel, we organized a
conference towards Beijing under the auspices of the Prime
Minister's office. Representatives of 70 women's NGO's took part in
the gathering, which was called, "To Look at the World Through
Women's Eyes."
On the conference's steering committee, we had representative from
nine organizations representing over one million Israeli women.
There were also representatives from smaller organizations, Jewish
and Arab alike.
Every day, these groups work with women in crisis, battered women,
victims of rape and sexual harassment, women in economically
depressed areas, new female immigrants, war widows, agunot,
lesbians, and women suffering from breast cancer, ovarian cancer
and other diseases.
Ten working groups at the conference addressed issues such as
violence against women, rights of specific demographic groups (like
one-parent families), women in poverty, education for gender
equality, religion and women's rights, women's health, political
and economic empowerment, and women in war and peace.
Madame Chairperson,
At Beijing, we plan to present Israel's experience in the sphere of
advancing the status of women, emphasizing not only our
achievements, but also, mistakes which have been made. We hope that
our experience can help other nations learn not only how to score
successes, but also, how to avoid pitfalls.
I am happy to bring to your attention that the Department for
Development Support and Management Services signed an agreement
with the Government of Israel to conduct a seminar on strategies
for enhancing the participation of women in the development
process. Approximately 25 women from northern African countries
will come to the Golda Meir International Center on Mount Carmel in
Haifa, for training on issues related to community development and
programme design.
On March 6, 1995, we brought together 3,000 women, representing
32,000 female government employees in Israel, for a conference with
the Prime Minister looking towards Beijing. Prime Minister Yitzhak
Rabin called for a reevaluation of the way the state addresses the
status of women. He called on us to look towards the future.
I quote: "Half of the population in Israel are women. And surely
there is no people certainly not the people of Israel that
won't want to work for the good of each individual and the whole
society by fostering the enormous potential contained in one half
of its nation.
"The struggle to improve the status of women is a long one. It goes
on in many countries including our own.... In this struggle, we
have to overcome cultural norms, sometimes also religious. It is
appropriate every so often to reflect and consider what has been
achieved, and what obstacles still lie before us so that we may
overcome them.
"There is no doubt in my mind, that we must do more to fulfill the
potential of every human being. Especially for women, to develop
their talents fully in all fields of their activity. There is
certainly a place in this for affirmative action. I see no shame in
affirmative action.
"We must not fear to expose the grave conditions that result from
the current status of women. First and foremost, violence against
women. We must fight this with all legal means, in cooperation with
women, voluntary organizations and government ministries....
"There are two sides to the struggle to improve the status of
women: The first is affirmative action, to give women the ability
to express fully their abilities and potentials. The second is to
fight violence against women in all its manifestations, as a part
of a broader campaign against violence in general, in an effort to
eliminate all these phenomena. Battering of women, and violence
against women both in the home and outside of it are phenomena that
have to be uprooted from Israeli society. If we can accomplish
this, we will be able to say that we have made significant progress
in closing the gaps in the status of women."
In Israel, we believe that achieving equality and development for
women are intimately bound up in peace. In the words of one our
great poets of peace, Shaul Kenaz,
"Just to remind you every day
That if there is no peace here,
There won't be anything.
Just to remind you that now there is a chance.
Just to remind you that you are a human being.
Just to say that for peace that is enough."
Thank you, Madame Chairperson.