http://news.independent.co.uk/world/politics/article2606452.ece

Nobel winners decry lack of women's rights in Middle East 
By David McKittrick, Ireland Correspondent 
Published: 02 June 2007 

Individually they are impressive; together they are formidable. Six Nobel Peace 
laureates from around the world - all women - gathered in Dublin yesterday to 
take part in a major conference on the issue of female empowerment and the 
advancement of peace in the Middle East. 

The group, two of whom are Irish, represent six of the seven living female 
Nobel laureates. The seventh, Aung San Suu Kyi, remains imprisoned in Burma.

Describing the conference, one of the six, Professor Jody Williams, said: "We 
looked at the violence against women resulting from the war in Iraq, which has 
its roots in the oil industry's lust for the reserves in the Middle East and 
the resulting interests at stake."

Last year, the laureates established the Nobel Women's Initiative, which they 
described as a collective voice on issues of peace and women's rights. Its 
purpose is "to address and work to prevent the root causes of violence by 
spotlighting and promoting the efforts of women's rights activists, researchers 
and organisations working to advance peace, justice and equality".

Those attending the conference included 80 women's rights activists from 30 
different countries, as well as ex-political prisoners, founders of 
international rights organisations, disarmament experts, journalists and 
emerging activists.

One of its stated aims was "deepening our understanding of how the private and 
public dynamics of violence against women, particularly in the Middle East, 
intersect and therefore how solutions must reflect a more integrated approach." 
The conference concluded that the root causes of violence were inequalities, 
including those of power, control of resources, racism, intolerance and the 
denial of rights for women. One of the laureates, Shirin Ebadi, noted: "It is 
our sadness that our sister laureate Aung San Suu Kyi has yet again had her 
detention extended. We look forward to a day when she can be amongst us." She 
added: "We discussed the role of the media in dismissing and sometimes 
trivialising the voices of women, saving our environment, equal access to 
resources of all types, equal access to justice, stopping the madness of the 
proliferation of weapons around the world that fuel the wars, killing us, our 
children and our husbands."

Leading a movement against violence 

* JODY WILLIAMS, a professor, won the 1997 Nobel Peace Prize along with the 
International Campaign to Ban Landmines, which she headed and which grew to 
encompass more than 1,000 separate organisations.Forbes magazine included her 
in its list of the world's 100 most powerful women.

* BETTY WILLIAMS was co-leader of the Peace People with Mairead Corrigan, the 
two women sharing the 1976 Nobel Peace Prize. As the Peace People went into 
decline she became estranged from Ms Corrigan. She has since been active in 
various international peace projects.

* SHIRIN EBADI won the 2003 Peace Prize for promoting the rights of women and 
children in Iran. She became the country's first female judge in 1975 but 
retired after the Islamic revolution. Her Nobel citation said: "She has stood 
up as ... a courageous person who has never heeded threats to her safety."

* MAIREAD CORRIGAN came to prominence in Belfast in 1976 when three of her 
sister's children were killed after troops killed an IRA militant whose car 
crashed into them. The incident led to the formation of the Peace People. It 
attracted widespread support but faded due to internal differences. 


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