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should also intensify its efforts to make States aware of the negative implications of traditional
practices (levirate, polygamy, forced marriage, etc.) in regard to sexually transmitted diseases
and especially the spread of the AIDS virus..
220. Cooperation by United Nations bodies, in particular UNICEF, should be strengthened for
the purpose of conducting sensitization campaigns to change negative attitudes towards women
and girls.285 In the area of education, the work of the United Nations Educational, Scientific and
Cultural Organization (UNESCO) is also useful in, inter alia, improving the content of curricula
in subjects such as biology and providing information on the negative effects of harmful
practices such as female genital mutilation (E/CN.4/Sub.2/1994/10/Add.1 and Corr.1).
221. Also, the persistence of certain practices would appear to be due to a lack of political will
on the part of the Governments concerned and failure to inform and educate the public.286
International human rights bodies and organizations should encourage States through ongoing
awareness campaigns to refrain from misusing the argument of cultural or religious relativism to
evade their responsibilities under relevant international instruments for the protection of the
rights of women and girls. In general terms, international bodies and organizations should
strengthen their financial and logistical support to women’s organizations at the local and
national levels, political personnel, health professionals, religious and civil society leaders and
media officials with a view to the abolition of practices harmful to women.
(b)
Information gathering
222. It has been seen that, with the exception of female genital mutilation, there is a shortage, if
not absence, of governmental or official information on other traditional and cultural practices
which may or may not have a basis in religion, including crimes of honour, dowry-related
practices, son preference and many other customary practices in Africa and Asia. The Special
Rapporteur on traditional practices affecting the health of women and the girl child has
repeatedly deplored this insufficiency and it is NGOs and press reports that enable her to carry
out her mandated tasks, albeit in difficult conditions (E/CN.4/Sub.2/1999/14, paras. 69 ff.).
223. It is therefore essential that all parties involved, including States, undertake, through the
impetus of relevant international bodies and organizations, a systematic and exhaustive study of
such practices in all continents with a view to identifying their basis, scope and negative impact
on women’s status. It would be particularly useful to know the extent to which many of these
practices have evolved in relation to their original ancestral function and to verify, with the help
of enlightened religious officials, their supposedly religious origin.
2. Protection
(a)
Strengthening of instruments
224. Overall, women’s status in the light of religion and traditions does not appear to suffer
from legal gaps or insufficient texts. Legal bases are on the whole extensive and rights are
generally well defined. As stated by the Secretary-General of the United Nations, it is now less
urgent to define new rights than to prevail on States to adopt existing instruments and implement
them effectively.287 That conclusion has to be qualified or rather modified since the protection of
women’s rights is a relatively recent development.