Anne-Marie Slaughter
CEO, 国产视频
After 11 years behind bars in Burma鈥搉ine in solitary confinement鈥揾uman rights activist Zin Mar Aung emerged from prison in 2009 to face a new obstacle: she couldn鈥檛 obtain a passport to travel overseas at the invitation of a small human rights group. The government had released her from confinement, but continued to limit her movements.
That changed in 2012, when she discovered she鈥檇 won the U.S. State Department鈥檚 International Woman of Courage Award for her groundbreaking efforts to empower women in her country and beyond. Within days, Aung received her passport and headed for Washington, DC.
But when she returned to Burma, authorities revoked her passport once again. When she informed the State Department, they assured her they鈥檇 just keep inviting her over, Aung recounted at a recent 国产视频/Radio Free Asia event. They weren鈥檛 the only ones offering invitations; for the past six months, she has been a fellow at the National Endowment for Democracy, and just completed her tenure.
This week, Aung returned to Burma to continue fighting for human rights and women鈥檚 political empowerment. But if history is any indication, she may once again face opposition from the powers that be.
Aung鈥檚 story serves as an important reminder for all of us as we approach this year鈥檚 International Women鈥檚 Day: recognition helps. It鈥檚 true that in some parts of the world, taking support from American or Western governments can be a detriment to local activists. But we can鈥檛 forget that in many cases, our support can shorten prison sentences, galvanize broader humanitarian efforts, and reduce torture.
We are most effectively persuasive when we recognize the voiceless, especially women activists who live in Burma and other Asian countries under strict authoritarian rule. While fighting for their rights, these fearless individuals must contend鈥攁t great cost to themselves and their families鈥攚ith rigidly gendered social norms, negligible representation in government, disenfranchised civil societies, and few legal protections.
In Laos, Cambodia, Burma and Vietnam, for example, the vast majority of ordinary women lacking family connections or wealth are grossly underrepresented in government and cannot access other key institutions that might substantially improve their lives and communities.
In Burma, even though Nobel laureate and iconic democracy activist Aung San Suu Kyi now holds a seat in Myanmar鈥檚 parliament, women hold less than four percent of the seats in that legislative body鈥攁 total of a meager 25 out of 652.
Women like Suu Kyi who have achieved name recognition in the West have a distinct advantage. Their high profiles span their home countries and the world, putting them and their families in a better position to avoid imprisonment and abuse. Their popularity also translates into widespread support, helping to advance their cause.
But how many of us have heard of Sivanxai Phommalath or Nurungul Tohti? Phommalath, from Laos, was detained for three months after protesting the totalitarian government鈥檚 unfair seizure of and inadequate compensation for her family鈥檚 property. Tohti, a Uyghur mother in China鈥檚 northwest, sought answers from authorities about the abduction and suspected sexual abuse of her son. Her campaign for information ultimately led to her being jailed.
And yet, these are the women who are fighting not only for women鈥檚 rights, but for the rights of all of the dispossessed. 鈥淲e鈥檙e working for our whole community, our whole society,鈥 Aung confirmed.
Asian women make up a rapidly growing group of activists fighting for their families and communities. They are factory workers whose pay has been withheld by human- and drug-trafficking gangs, mothers whose children have been kidnapped with the complicity of the police, and lawyers who refuse to accept political complacency. And many of them are under the age of 30.
鈥淭he younger generation has seen how their parents were incapacitated by the government and they don鈥檛 want to suffer the same fate,鈥 said Binh Nguyen, MD, the Director of the Human Rights for Vietnam Political Action Committee. 鈥淓ncouraged by the Arab Spring鈥hey realize that they are able to reach out to the international community much more than in previous generations.鈥
Across Asia, this new generation is already rising up and taking its human rights battles global, with the weapon of 聽digital literacy in its arsenal. Take Vietnamese blogger and rights advocate Tran Thi Nga, who uploads videos of citizen confrontations with authorities to YouTube. 聽Or the Umbrella Movement鈥檚 Yvonne Leung, a student leader who masterfully debated Hong Kong officials on live television. Time and again, these and other fierce women have demonstrated enormous media and Web savvy to engage their fellow citizens and the world.
In observing International Women鈥檚 Day, it鈥檚 essential for the international community to meet these unsung Asian female leaders half way by recognizing their contributions. They play an enormous role as agents of reform who can help hundreds of millions of their fellow citizens. Action, in the form of international pressure and attention, is instrumental to their survival and success.
And yet, as Aung points out, government action is only part of the solution. Policies often exist only on paper. When Burma鈥檚 military government petitioned to be part of the Association of Southeast Nations (ASEAN) in the late 90s, it had to agree to certain gender equity stipulations.
鈥淭hey signed CEDAW, but they haven鈥檛 implemented it,鈥 Aung said, referring to the international U.N. treaty, the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women. They founded a government-sponsored women鈥檚 organization 鈥 but put the wives of its despotic generals in charge of it.
鈥淲e need to empower and encourage women鈥檚 groups that balance the government-sponsored women鈥檚 organizations,鈥 Aung declared. That empowerment should begin by sharing in these women鈥檚 struggles (and breakthroughs) through media and political channels.
It鈥檚 been over a century since International Women鈥檚 Day began at the turn of the 20th century and 20 years since Hillary Clinton made her 鈥淲omen鈥檚 Rights are Human Rights鈥 speech in Beijing. As we take stock of how far we鈥檝e come in the fight for women鈥檚 rights in all that time, we鈥檇 be wise to listen to鈥攁nd wherever we can, amplify鈥攖he voices of the women who are fighting battles around the world every day. They are the ones who can identify the biggest holes in the fabric of justice.