Building upon remarkable progress to claim spaces for women’s voices in Yemen peace talks over the past years, the annual Yemen Feminist Peace Convening is back in its Fourth edition, organized by the Peace Track Initiative, with support from Women’s International League for Peace and Freedom (WILPF), and the Ministry of Foreign Affairs in the Netherlands.
This year’s Convening will start with an accessible live stream of all our panels from December 16-18, open to everyone. This convening seeks to extend a space for feminist organizations and leaders to strategize and engage, as well as to showcase the progress and impact of the Feminist Peace Roadmap (FPR)—a first-of-its-kind, women-led framework for the achievement of inclusive, feminist peace in Yemen. Which includes expanded thematics such as the issue of minorities, and climate change, and gives special attention to the Taiz and Houdidah governorates.
An evolution of the FPR is PTI’s involved engagement with Yemen’s male political leadership on the blueprint. Previously focusing majorly on consultations with women leaders, civil society organizations, and women-led organizations, this new effort to engage with and collect feedback from political leaders will bring greater visibility to the FPR, ensure it is rooted in local contexts, and advance its impact.
Moreover, This year’s Convening will host diverse panels that will explore key themes, including advancing the Feminist Peace Roadmap, addressing the crisis of detainees, and localizing Yemen’s National Action Plan with a focus on grassroots implementation and climate inclusion. Discussions will also examine the intersection of climate change, gender-based violence, and conflict, the power of feminist solidarity and coalition-building, and pathways to self-determination and reconciliation for South Yemen.
In this article, we’re taking a look at the current situation in Yemen, the role and impact of the Feminist Peace Roadmap in influencing peace processes in the country, and what’s coming up next.
Yemeni women in the face of the world’s worst humanitarian crisis
Eight years into the war in Yemen, the conflict is taking a catastrophic toll on the lives of Yemeni civilians. With Yemen now experiencing the world’s worst humanitarian crisis, nearly 25 million Yemenis need humanitarian assistance while more than 13 million are on the brink of starvation. It is estimated that the war has led to the deaths of at least 233,000 men, women, and children since 2014 – with approximately 133,000 a result of food insecurity and lack of access to health care.
Amid these dire circumstances, Yemeni women are continuing to mobilize for a future of peace and stability in Yemen – and taking their rightful place as powerful advocates for change.
Women-led, grassroots-centred: Getting to the Feminist Peace Roadmap
In 2019, recognizing that peace talks in Yemen were stalling and failing to recognize the unique impacts of the crisis on women, WILPF and PTI jointly launched a series of consultations with Yemeni women leaders and national stakeholders.
To ensure the inclusion of women’s voices and recommendations in Yemeni peace processes and develop a guiding framework for the achievement of peace in Yemen, the consultations led to the first Yemen Feminist Peace Convening in 2019, and the beginnings of the Feminist Peace Roadmap (FPR).
“For so long, women have been told that because they don’t hold the arms, their expertise and their voices are not a necessary component of the peace talks. And what this does is that it creates peace negotiations and conflict resolution mechanisms that just tackle the needs of half of the population — of men. The Feminist Peace Roadmap comes to turn around this narrative, to reassure that women’s expertise and women’s voices are really critical to achieve durable peace — a peace that actually stands a chance to resist that conflict cycle.”
— Aicha Madi, former gender, peace, and security officer at PTI
Women-led and grassroots-centred, the FPR is a pioneering initiative where Yemeni women lay out a guiding framework for the achievement of peace in Yemen through three phases: ceasefire, comprehensive peace negotiation, and political transition.
The FPR was developed in four phases. First, PTI consulted with 30 women political leaders, civil society representatives, and independent experts inside and outside Yemen. From there, they partnered with nine women-led organizations to host local consultations on specific thematic issues, which laid the foundation for the development of the FPR. The third phase was the formal launch of the FPR at the High-Level Virtual Yemen Feminist Peace Convening in 2021.
During the fourth phase, which is currently underway, the partners are hosting a series of local workshops to support the translation of recommendations from the FPR into action.
In all, more than 1,000 Yemeni women leaders and other stakeholders have been engaged in consultations about the FPR since 2019.
The FPR is influencing real change.
Since its launch a year ago, the FPR has directly influenced multilateral peace talks and processes in Yemen.
According to PTI’s team findings, Key recommendations from the FPR were adopted in UN Security Council Resolution 2624 (2022) on Yemen, including a demand for “the full, equal, and meaningful participation of women in the peace process” and stressing the “need for sufficient and appropriate protections for women and girls in refugee camps and elsewhere” who are experiencing or at risk of sexual and gender-based violence.
What’s next: Getting political
Following this year’s Convening, PTI will continue building momentum around the FPR, creating spaces for dialogue, and advocating for the full inclusion of women in peace talks in Yemen. As a living document, the FPR will continue to be updated as the situation in Yemen evolves and new recommendations are adopted.
Learn more about the Yemen Feminist Peace Convening and the Feminist Peace Roadmap.
If you have any questions or feedback, please contact info@peacetrackinitiative.org