A/RES/64/11
against Women 8 and by the Afghan Constitution, and reiterates the continued
importance of the full and equal participation of women in all spheres of Afghan life
and of equality before the law and equal access to legal counsel without
discrimination of any kind;
7F
40. Reiterates, in view of legislation recently adopted, the continued
importance of upholding international obligations for the advancement of women’s
rights, as enshrined in the Afghan Constitution, welcomes the presidential decree
regarding the law on the elimination of violence against women and calls for its
timely implementation, and appreciates the preparation by the Government of
Afghanistan for reporting to the Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination
against Women in 2010;
41. Strongly condemns incidents of discrimination and violence against
women and girls, in particular if directed against women activists and women
prominent in public life, wherever they occur in Afghanistan, including killings,
maimings and “honour killings” in certain parts of the country;
42. Welcomes the creation of a special fund for the protection of women at
risk, set up by the United Nations Development Fund for Women with the support of
the Office of the United Nations High Commissioner for Refugees;
43. Also welcomes the implementation of the National Action Plan for
Women in Afghanistan and the significant efforts by the Government of Afghanistan
to counter discrimination, urges the Government to actively involve all elements of
Afghan society, in particular women, in the development and implementation of
relief, rehabilitation, recovery and reconstruction programmes, and encourages the
collection and use of statistical data on a sex-disaggregated basis to provide
information on gender-based violence and to accurately track the progress of the full
integration of women into the political, economic and social life of Afghanistan;
44. Further welcomes the achievements and stresses the need for continued
progress in gender equality, in accordance with obligations under international law,
and in the empowerment of women in Afghan politics, which will help to
consolidate durable peace and national stability in Afghanistan, while noting the
need to promote the empowerment of women also at the subnational level, to
facilitate the access of women to employment and to ensure female literacy,
professional training and entrepreneurship, and calls upon the international
community to continue to support Afghan institutions in this regard;
45. Stresses the need to ensure respect for the human rights and fundamental
freedoms of children in Afghanistan, welcomes the submission of the initial report
of Afghanistan to the Committee on the Rights of the Child, and recalls the need for
the full implementation of the Convention on the Rights of the Child 9 and the two
Optional Protocols thereto 10 by all States parties, as well as of Security Council
resolutions 1612 (2005) of 26 July 2005 and 1882 (2009) of 4 August 2009 on
children and armed conflict;
8F
9F
46. Expresses its concern, in this regard, about the ongoing recruitment and
use of children by illegal armed and terrorist groups in Afghanistan, as described in
the report of the Secretary-General on children and armed conflict in Afghanistan of
_______________
8
United Nations, Treaty Series, vol. 1249, No. 20378.
Ibid., vol. 1577, No. 27531.
10
Ibid., vols. 2171 and 2173, No. 27531.
9
8