United Nations Security Council Resolution 1889

UN Security Council
Resolution 1889
Date: 5 October 2009
Meeting no.: 6,196
Code: S/RES/1889

Vote: For: 15 Abs.: 0 Against: 0
Subject: Women and peace and security
Result: Adopted

Security Council composition in 2009:
permanent members:

 CHN  FRA  RUS  UK  USA

non-permanent members:
 AUT  BUR  CRC  CRO  JPN
 LBY  MEX  TUR  UGA  VIE

United Nations Security Council Resolution 1889 was unanimously adopted on 5 October 2009.

Contents

Resolution

The Security Council this morning called for a wide range of measures to strengthen the participation of women at all stages of peace processes, focusing on the period after peace agreements have been reached, as it began an intensive day-long discussion on the topic.

Through the unanimous adoption of resolution 1889 (2009), the Council reaffirmed its landmark 2000 resolution 1325 on “women and peace and security”, and condemned continuing sexual violence against women in conflict and post-conflict situations. It urged Member States, United Nations bodies, donors and civil society to ensure that women’s protection and empowerment was taken into account during post-conflict needs assessment and planning, and factored into subsequent funding and programming.

It also called on all those involved in the planning for disarmament, demobilization and integration programmes, in particular, to take into account the needs of women and girls associated with armed groups, as well as the needs of their children.

Through the text, the Council requested the Secretary-General to submit a report within 12 months focused on women in post-conflict situations, and to ensure cooperation between the Special Representative of the Secretary-General on Children and Armed Conflict and the Special Representative on sexual violence in armed conflict, whose appointment had been requested by last week’s resolution 1888 (2009).

“A cessation of conflict should not result in the marginalization of women and girls, nor their relegation to stereotypical roles,” United Nations Deputy Secretary-General Asha-Rose Migiro said as she opened the discussion on behalf of Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon. [1]

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