BANGLADESHI ALL-WOMEN PEACEKEEPING UNIT (BANGLADESH POLICE)
Last month, Bangladesh sent one of
the world’s three all-women peacekeeping units on a mission to Haiti where the
United Nations (UN) peacekeepers had reportedly exchanged basic necessities for
sex with poor women. The unit is comprised of Muslim women who have served in
Bangladesh’s police force, and has been deployed to assist the UN police force
and the Haitian national police. The job empowers the women financially as it
pays more than serving in the Bangladeshi police force. The other two all-women
peacekeeping units are deployed on missions to Liberia and the Democratic
Republic of Congo (DRC).
Journey of a Thousand Miles:
Peacekeepers, a documentary directed by Sharmeen Obaid Chinoy and Geeta
Gandhbir following the 140 women serving in this unit on their mission to Haiti
from June 2013 to July 2014, which was premiered at the Toronto International
Film Festival 2015.
When asked about why she directed
the movie Gandhbir responded,
“What you see in the film
is that these Bangladeshi women are the breadwinners. They go out from their
traditional communities to leave the men at home with the children. It’s a role
for women in that region that we haven’t heard much about and these women do it
effectively. It’s important for everyone to see that.”
In her interview she also talked
about the lives of some of the women peacekeepers from the unit. Farida Parvin
had lived a hard life and decided to go on a mission to become an inspiration
to her son who had lost his father. Mousumi Sultan had suffered domestic abuse
in her family and joined the Bangladeshi police force to battle domestic
violence against women. Rehana Parvin comes from a conservative background; her
son considers it a sin for her to work.
Ghandhbir witnessed the impact of a
women-only peacekeeping unit on the local populations; women and children were
more open and comfortable with them.
The
Need for More Female Peacekeepers
The involvement of women in the UN
peacekeeping forces has grown over the past years however at a slow pace.
Twenty years ago, women made up only 1% of the UN uniformed forces, meanwhile
today 3% of military personnel and 10% of police personnel are women.
Norway’s Major General Kristin Lund,
the first female to serve as Force Commander in a United Nations peacekeeping
operation said,
“Being a female, from my
recent deployment in Afghanistan, I had access to 100% of the population, not
only 50%.”
Peacekeeping operations require
intelligence-gathering, as well as mapping and tracking military factions in
order to protect local civilians and in most cases the local populations are
the main source of information. Also, the peacekeeping forces have to put in
early warning systems. All of these operations require the building of trust
with the locals through communication. Since women and children are victims of
armed conflict, peacekeeping forces need to interact with them in order to
properly protect them. Due to cultural restrictions, male peacekeepers might
not be able to access a significant part of the population. This issue can be
solved with the presence of female peacekeepers as they would have access to
women and children.
Moreover, women peacekeepers focus
on community policing rather than aggressive methods of enforcing law and
order. Gandhbir mentioned incidents in Haiti where young men threw stones at
the female peacekeepers. Despite the police officers’ advice to arrest them,
the peacekeepers chose not to do so because they thought of them as “harmless
kids, playing around and looking for food.”
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