Nina Potarska, a member of the ICAN-spearheaded Women’s Alliance for Security Leadership, is currently at sea with the Global Sumud Flotilla, a civilian-led mission organized with the Freedom Flotilla Coalition, en route to Gaza.
(New York, 9 March 2015) International Women’s Day was marked today by two United Nations events in New York and Geneva highlighting the ongoing threats, risks and attacks against women human rights defenders, despite the existing State obligations to ensure their protection and to create an enabling environment for their work.
The event in New York was organised by Norway, Tunisia, Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights (OHCHR), together with civil society partners – Amnesty International, Association for Women’s Rights in Development (AWID), International Civil Society Action Network (ICAN), International Service for Human Rights (ISHR), Just Associates (JASS), Nobel Women’s Initiative and the Women Human Rights Defenders International Coalition (WHRDIC), and was held on the sidelines of the 59th session of the Commission on the Status of Women.
Opening the event in New York, Mr. Ivan Šimonovid , United Nations Assistant Secretary-General for Human Rights, spoke to the UN General Assembly resolution of 2013 on the protection of women human rights defenders. ‘The resolution provides an inclusive characterization of women human rights defenders’ he said, ‘and outlines a range of steps that States should take to ensure the protection of all women defenders.’
Mr. Hans Brattskar, State Secretary of Norway, stressed that the General Assembly resolution was a step in the right direction, but that much more is needed to implement it in practice, including by addressing reprisals against WHRDs. Ms. Samira Merai Friaa, Minister of Women, Family and Children for Tunisia, agreed that implementation is key. ‘ We must recognise and foster the important work of WHRDs, whose role it is to raise critical human rights issues,’ she said. ‘WHRDs have a key role in advancing women’s rights, including in the face of extremist ideologies.’
Civil society panellists from Afghanistan, Egypt and Mexico outlined the experiences of women human rights defenders in their respective countries and regions. They highlighted challenges they face in their everyday lives, such as threats and attacks from State and non-State actors including from family and community members. These violations are frequently gender-specific, including attacks on their reputation designed to stigmatise and undermine their work. All too often the perpetrators of such threats and attacks are not brought to justice.
Mary Akrami from the Afghan Women’s Network stressed the essential role of women in peace processes. ‘Women and women human rights defenders need support to protect them from threats and attacks from both State and non-State actors,’ she said. ‘Protection cannot remain on paper. We need real, practical implementation. We are in a very sensitive time. We need everyone’s resolve and solidarity’, urged Ms Akrami.
Speaking to the obligations of States, Cristina Hardaga from Just Associates (JASS) referred to consultations held in the Mesoamerican region on effective protection mechanisms. ‘The General Assembly resolution is a key tool that women human rights defenders should use to hold governments to account,’ she urged. Highlighting the ever-shrinking space for civil society, she noted ‘Access to funds for grassroots women human rights defenders is limited, and the gap in regular communication between civil society and governments creates a lack of trust that needs to be addressed.’
Mozn Hassan from Nazra for Feminist Studies also highlighted the need for establishing networks amongst activists. ‘We have recently formed a coalition of women defenders in the Middle East and North Africa, to give a voice to the women in the region,’ adding that ‘Such cooperation amongst defenders is needed to counter the majority narrative on women in public space, which is so frequently restricted.’
‘Regional mechanisms can also play an important role in protecting WHRDs,’ added Commissioner Reine Alapini Gansou, Special Rapporteur on Human Rights Defenders of the African Commission on Human and Peoples’ Rights. Outlining the recommendations of the first ever Commission report on the situation of women defenders across the continent, she said: ‘States to put in place a national mechanism on the ground for the protection of women defenders , and implement laws for their protection and fight impunity’.
Participants at the event, including from the WHRD International Coalition, expressed their disappointment that the political declaration adopted by the CSW earlier that day did not explicitly refer to women human rights defenders.
Highlighting the recent OHCHR #reflect2protect campaign, a short clip was shown from the campaign’s video series featuring women human rights defenders from around the world. In it, the High Commissioner for Human Rights states that ‘real change does not happen unless women and men fight for these rights – and at the forefront of this fight are women human rights defenders’.
The UN General Assembly passed its first resolution on Women Human Rights Defenders in December 2013. The resolution is a significant step forward in protecting Women Human Rights Defenders who face risks and attacks for their work to promote human rights.
The Commission on the Status of Women, meeting from 9-20 March 2015 in New York, is the principle global policy-making body dedicated to gender equality and the advancement of women. The theme of the 59th session focuses on the implementation of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, twenty years after its adoption.
The Office of the High Commissioner on Human Rights (OHCHR) launched a campaign on 10 December 2014 called #reflect2protect, focusing on the work of women human rights defenders and their specific protection needs.
ICAN is hiring a Staff Accountant to provide financial and administrative support to ICAN’s Finance Director and broader team.
ICAN Updates Jobs
On October 6, 2025, the U.N. Security Council holds its annual open debate on Resolution 1325 on Women, Peace, and Security. Today, we are not issuing a new statement. Instead, we are honoring our community of women peacebuilders—who appeared before the Security Council throughout these 25 years, speaking for the millions they represent—by echoing their messages.
ICAN Featured ICAN Latest ICAN Updates WASL Updates Women's Alliance for Security Leadership
On behalf of the International Civil Society Action Network (ICAN) and members of the global Women’s Alliance for Security Leadership (WASL), we are honored to nominate Francesca Albanese, United Nations Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights in the Palestinian territories occupied since 1967, for the 2026 Nobel Peace Prize.
ICAN Featured ICAN Updates Uncategorized
در عرصه صحت روانی، افغانستان با بحران پیچیدهای مواجه است که این بحران به طور جدایی ناپذیر با ناامنی شدید فیزیکی، سیاسی و اقتصادی در کشور گره خورده و این نا امنی ها بحران را تشدید میکند. برای رسیدگی به آسیب های روانی، صحت و بهداشت جامعه به شیوه های پاسخگو به جنسیت و با مد نظر گرفتن حساسیت های فرهنگی، سازمانهای فعال در عرصه صلح سازی به رهبری زنان افغان در موقعیتی منحصربه فرد قرار دارند. این سازمان ها خدمات ابتدایی ارائه میدهند، مهارتها را توسعه میبخشند و در شکلدهی هنجارهای فرهنگی و جنسیتی نقش مؤثر ایفا میکنند.
ICAN Featured ICAN Latest ICAN Updates WASL Updates Women's Alliance for Security Leadership WPSO
افغانستان له یوه ډېر پېچلي اروایي/رواني روغتیايي حالت سره مخ دی چې دا حالت د هېواد له ناامنۍ، سیاسي ګډوډۍ او اقتصادي ستونزو سره تړلی او لا یې دا ستونزې زیاتې کړي دي. د افغان ښځو په مشرۍ سولهپالې ادارې کولی شي د خلکو روغتیا او هوساینې ته پاملرنه وکړي، ځکه د دوی کار د ښځو اړتیاوو ته په پاملرنه ترسره کیږي، له کلتوري حساسیتونو سره سمون لري او د ټروما په معلوماتو باندې متکي (trauma-informed) تګلارې دي. دا ادارې اساسي خدمتونه وړاندې کوي، خلکو ته مهارتونه ورزده کوي او کلتوري دودونه او جنسیتي اړخونه تر پوښښ لاندې نیسي.
ICAN Featured ICAN Latest ICAN Updates WASL Updates Women's Alliance for Security Leadership WPSO
In a powerful departure from traditional advocacy, ICAN—guided by our Afghan partners and women peacebuilders—hosted the event “Watan e Ma – وطن ما – Our Homeland: Women of Afghanistan Keeping the Flame of Freedom Alive” on March 17, 2025 at Blue Gallery in New York City. Held during the 69th Commission on the Status of Women (CSW69), the event celebrated Afghan cultural heritage and the resilience of Afghan women peacebuilders, who persist in their leadership for peace, justice, and equality under the Taliban’s regime of gender apartheid.
ICAN Latest ICAN Updates
On May 5, 2025, ICAN's Sanam Naraghi Anderlini delivered the keynote speech at the two-day international conference "25th Anniversary Conference of UNSCR 1325 Women, Peace and Security."
ICAN Featured ICAN Updates Sanam Op-Eds
As Senator Mobina Jaffer concludes 23 years of distinguished public service in the Canadian Senate, we extend our deepest thanks for her steadfast leadership as Chair of ICAN’s Board of Directors from 2014 to 2024.
ICAN Featured ICAN Updates
Together with André Mundal, our new Interim Chair of the ICAN Board of Directors, we are delighted to welcome two new members to our Board of Directors.
ICAN Updates
Trust between communities and the security sector is critical for effective governance and peace. So is a vibrant civil society. When women peacebuilders are recognized and engaged as independent, strategic partners and security actors—in their own right—the results are transformative. Twenty-five years on from the launch of the WPS agenda, women peacebuilders’ creativity and contributions to societal peace and security are not only timely, they are even more essential.
Allamin Foundation AWAPSA AWAW Better Peace Initiative CIASE CoACT GEN Myanmar Gender and Extremisms ICAN Featured ICAN Latest ICAN Updates PAIMAN PCID WASL Updates Women's Alliance for Security Leadership
Afghanistan is facing a complex mental health crisis inextricably linked with and compounding the dire state of physical, political, and economic insecurity in the country. Afghan women-led peacebuilding organizations are uniquely positioned to address community members’ health and wellness in gender-responsive, culturally- sensitive, and trauma-informed ways.
ICAN Featured ICAN Latest ICAN Updates WASL Updates Women's Alliance for Security Leadership WPSO