donderdag 12 maart 2015

Dutch Side-Event in New York

March 10 in New York.

At 1.15 PM all Dutch NGO’s present, joined the lunch for Dutch NGO’s with Minister Jet Bussemaker and two of the ministers from Aruba and St Maarten.
It was a lively lunch with a lot of questions. Jet Bussemaker especially mentioned the success of LGTB side event of the day before.

I used the opportunity to offer the three ministers a Red Heart, as a symbol against VAW. The red hearts are made by women survivors in Tunisia especially for the 3rd World Conference and half of the price of a red heart goes to the 3rd World Conference. From all over the world we want women to send us their picture wearing the red heart: to form a chain against Violence Against Women.
(Red Hearts can be bought via the website: www.wordlshelterconference.org  under the button: sponsoring).

The 3rd World Conference of Women’s shelters will take place in the Hague in November 2015.  The moment is well chosen:  In September the UN general Assembly will decide on the Post 15 goals. So at the conference there will be the opportunity to review the goals concerning VAW and also make a start with the implementation.  The Netherlands will have the chair of the EU in the first half of 2016, and therefore has the opportunity to put the relevant conclusions of the conference on the agenda of the EU. 

President of GNWS Bandana Randa (left) and 4 ministers of the Kingdom of the Netherlands (photographer: Richard Koek)

Later that afternoon the Global Network of Women’s Shelter hosted a side event together with the Permanent Residence of the Kingdom of the Netherlands.  All three minsters joined us at the side event, and also the minister of Curacao.  As did a lot or participants from all over the world.
The event was chaired by Bandana Rana from Nepal, chair of GNWS and executive director of Saathi: an organisation for women’s shelters and youth care. She expressed the importance of the voices of shelters:  they do the daily work with women and children that flee from violence.  The Global Network of Women’s Shelters exists since 2008 and succeeded in building its networks of shelters in different continents.

To unite shelters and give the women they serve a global voice is an important aim of the conference.
Minister Jet Bussemaker said she was proud that the Netherlands will host such an important Conference. During her period as a secretary of state she was responsible for the women’s shelters and in that period she learned a lot about their work through regular working visits.  She said it is important to support grassroot organizations and NGO’s and that the Dutch government fully supports the conference and will help to make it a success. 

The first conference of women shelters was organised in Canada and Pat Vargas – executive director of Safe Place, a women’s shelter in Alberta - took us back to 2008. The conference was started with a breakfast with the guys: for them a very expensive breakfast - a donation to the conference -. But it also gave them the floor to talk about their community work to help prevent violence against women and the importance of taken a stand as guys.
Kaofeng Lee – deputy director of the safety net project at the US National Network to End Domestic Violence – was projectleader of the 2nd World Conference of Women’s Shelters and said she was proud to talk about this big event. She showed a video with several highlights of the 2nd World Conference and said she was thrilled that the 3rd Conference will take place very soon in the Hague.
Aleid van den Brink then got the floor to tell about objectives and main themes of the conference. Most important is – as it was at the first and second World Conference – the exchange or expertise between shelterworkers from all over the world.

Riekje Kok gave practical information: about participation. She said the call for proposals in February already had led to 100 proposals and she invited the audience to send in their proposals as soon as possible. And she gave a few possibilities to financially support the conference by donations and by buying a red heart.

The event ended with a round of questions and remarks of the audience. Important was a plea to recognize (domestic) violence against disabled women. A representative of the African Network of Women’s Shelters was present in the audience and able to answer some questions about the network of shelters in the African continent.






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