Sierra Leone
Sierra Leone
Women in Sierra Leone were instrumental to the efforts of the international community to counter the Ebola crisis, and remain a key part of rebuilding the country after the civil war (1991-2002). However, women live under a patriarchal society, remaining largely excluded from politics, land ownership, and legal autonomy, and facing high levels of discrimination and sexual violence including marital rape, early marriage, and female genital mutilation/cutting (FGM/C).
Many of the obstacles faced by women increased in the wake of the 2014-2015 Ebola crisis, with sexual violence alone increasing by an estimated 40% (Humanist Watch Salone). Women’s groups have been advocating at the local and regional level to raise awareness of and address the particular negative consequences the crisis had on women and girls.
Based on the work of NGOWG members and their partners, the NGOWG advocates for the Security Council to monitor and evaluate the situation in Sierra Leone in the recent absence of a UN mission, the last of which was the 2008-2014 UN Integrated Peacebuilding Office in Sierra Leone (UNIPSIL). UNIPSIL’s mandate recognized the role of women in conflict prevention and resolution and included a gender perspective in the mandate’s implementation, and the Security Council should continue to advocate that such perspectives be implemented in domestic policies.
Current and Past Recommendations to the UN Security Council (Monthly Action Points)
The Council is expected to receive its final briefing on the UN mission in Sierra Leone (UNIPSIL), as the mission draws down to a UN country team (UNCT). At this time of transition, the Council should encourage Sierra Leone and UN entities to continue efforts to support the full and equal participation of women in political, economic and social spheres. It is vital in this regard that women continue to receive political and financial resources to ensure their meaningful engagement in Sierra Leone’s future, particularly regarding support for women-led civil society organizations. As it did in OP 11, SCR 2005 (2011), the Council should send a strong message that the gains for women must be consolidated in the transition to the UNCT, and that Member States must support this consolidation, including financially.