ASSYRIAN UNIVERSAL ALLIANCE
Member, Unrepresented Nations & Peoples Organization (UNPO)
United Nations Forum on Minority Issues
4th Session
November 29-30, 2011
Alen Mirza
Committee on International Organizations
Guaranteeing the Rights of Minority Women
Minority Women and Effective Political Participation
Fostering Civil Society to Combat Political and Economic Disenfranchisement among Minority
Women in Post-Conflict Situations.
Thank you Madam Chair:
Comprising just over 5% of Iraq’s population prior to the 2003 U.S. led invasion, Iraqi Assyrians currently
represent a staggering 22% of the country’s refugees abroad.1 Displacement among Iraqi Assyrians follows in waves after
each targeted attack against the country’s indigenous Christian community. To date, 70 of Iraq’s churches have been
bombed, with the most tragic occurring on October 31 of last year where over 50 Assyrians were massacred inside
Baghdad’s Our Lady of Salvation Church during Sunday Mass.2
In addition to concerns of displacement and security, Iraqi Assyrian women face disabling economic pressures as
well. One out of ten Iraqi households are headed by women, more than 80% of whom are widowed.3 Yet only 18% of
Iraq’s labor force is comprised of women and in certain districts of the Nineveh Plains – the region with the highest
concentration of ethno-religious minorities – labor participation among women falls below 6%.4
The current status of minorities and minority women in Iraq embodies an issue of international concern as it
identifies universal barriers towards meaningful participation by such communities in a country’s political and economic
reconstruction. In post-conflict situations, sectarian tensions marginalize minorities in general and minority women in
particular from participating in the country’s political and economic development. To ensure their active and meaningful
engagement, governments must adopt proactive measures to foster civil society aimed at promoting political and
economic involvement by minorities and minority women. Ultimately, a reasoned belief that such communities can
influence the direction of their country’s democratic progress and economic prosperity will work to reverse the crippling
effects of displacement, lack of security and political disenfranchisement that minorities and minority women bear at a
much greater extent than other groups in post-conflict situations.
We ask the United Nations and all international bodies involved in post-conflict situations to actively include
minorities and minority women in all dialogue relating to the country’s rebuilding. In particular, we ask the United
Nations Assistance Mission to Iraq (UNAMI), in cooperation with the Iraqi government, to exercise its mandate and more
actively include Assyrian and other minority civil society groups in discourse relating to the implementation of
constitutional provisions as well as development of processes acceptable to the Government of Iraq to resolve disputed
1
Iraq’s religious minorities also comprise up to 10% of the country’s internally displaced population.
http://www.irinnews.org/report.aspx?reportid=94389
2
A detailed account of church bombings in Iraq since the 2003 invasion can be found on the Assyrian International News Agency
website: http://www.aina.org/news/20080107163014.htm
3
http://www.unis.unvienna.org/pdf/factsheets/Iraqi_Women_Facts.pdf
4
The Nineveh Plains region is comprised of Tel Kef, Sheikhan and Hamdan iya districts within the Ninewa Governorate in Northern
Iraq. http://www.iauiraq.org/documents/489/Iraqi_Women-FINAL.pdf.
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