Safe World for Women

Katerva Awards

cooking-in-Kaabong3

2011 The Year of the Women

100 years of the women's movement

2011 is the most significant year ever in the history of women.

There is still more progress needed!

 

100 YEARS OF TALK

  • 100 years ago
    International Women’s Day was launched, with women demanding the right to vote, work, hold public office and an end to job discrimination.
  • 66 years ago
    The Charter of the United Nations was the first international agreement to proclaim gender equality as a fundamental human right.
  • 63 years ago
    the United Nations adopted the Universal Declaration of Human Rights.
  • 18 years ago
    the United Nations passed a resolution which said that States should condemn violence against women.
  • 17 years ago
    the UN passed a resolution outlining a Platform for Action for States to eliminate violence against women and girls.
  • 8 years ago
    the UN passed a resolution saying that States should implement the commitments made in the platform for action.
  • 6 years ago
    at the World Summit, world leaders declared that ‘progress for women is progress for all’.
  • 5 years ago
    Kofi Annan, Former UN Secretary-General, said… “There is no policy more effective in promoting development, health and education than the empowerment of women and girls.
  • 3 years ago
    UNIFEM began a public campaign to ‘inspire’ the member states to act by 2015.
  • Two years ago
    current UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said: “Violence against women is… an attack on all of us, on the foundation of our civilization. It destroys health and perpetuates poverty. It strikes against equality and empowerment.”
  • 18 months ago
    the UN adoped the Resolution to End Violence Against Women in Conflict Zones

MEANWHILE...

Women as a commodity:

Trading in women and girls is fast becoming more lucrative than the drugs trade - and just as corrupt.

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A Visit to Uganda

Visiting women & Children in Rural Uganda

I asked an elderly widow what changes she had seen in her lifetime: "None." She replied. "I'm still gathering leaves to eat. My roof still leaks." - 100 years of the women's movement?

The Children of Kaabong

'My first impressions were of a dry semi arid desert with little or no vegetation as far as the eye could see. The Ugandan army were ever-present, in an effort to protect the warring tribes from each…

Under A Banner

Safe World gratefully acknowledges the support of Adam Broadhurst & Jonathan Millington
from Under A Banner
for permission to use their song Scream on our video 'They Kept us Quiet So Long'
Watch the Video
Listen to more music from Under A Banner