![]() ![]() Similarly, one of most striking peace campaigns, the “Women in Black”, is active in the Israel-Palestine conflict, as well as in the former Yugoslavia. In Northern Ireland, feminist writers have documented the efforts of women’s groups from both sides to organise on working class lines, while the ‘men’ were negotiating a ‘settlement’. In countries around the world that have been stricken by protracted conflict, women have been actively involved in campaigns for peace. In addition to this, they will have to consider other important issues that lie outside this framework of rights which will inevitably surface in the post-conflict period. The Sub-Committee on Gender Issues that has instituted within the negotiating mechanism is only one such forum for articulating and placing these concerns within the framework of constitutional and political rights. Though these movements have been active in confronting the conflict over the last two decades, the transition to a potential military and political peace poses new dilemmas in framing women’s concerns. ![]() This adds a new dimension to the work of the women’s movements in Sri Lanka. The two parties to the separatist conflict in Sri Lankan-the Liberation Tigers of Tamil Eelam (LTTE) and the federal government-have been negotiating the political future of the country since a ceasefire agreement was signed by both parties on 22 February 2002. ![]()
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