Need For Protection Of Tibetan Women In Nepal
By KTM Metro Reporter
July 16, 2011: according to the news posted on Thetibetpsot.com, the Tibetan Women's Association (TWA) has prepared a shadow report in response to the Nepal's report to the 49th session of the Convention for the Elimination of Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW). The report details abuses against Tibetan women living in Nepal.
The report submitted in 2010 to the CEDAW only briefly mentions refugee women, claiming that their rights are protected. No mention of Tibetan women as a group or claims that abuses exist is made in the report.
TWA, the second-largest Tibetan non-governmental association, seeks to preserve human rights for Tibetan women living in Tibet as well as in exile. With 15,000 members outside Tibet, their slogan is "advocacy for home, action in exile."
The report acknowledges that much progress has been made in Nepal to ensure the equality of women in general, but says that that equality has not extended to Tibetan refugee women. The report cites numerous examples of sexual harassment and other abuses of Tibetan women by Nepali police.
The report cites one particularly grim case concerning the treat of deportation. A Tibetan woman traveling in a group of seven was raped 12 times by Nepali police officers. The group was told that they would all be deported if the woman did not agree. Later, the Nepali Ministry of Home Affairs denied the police involvement.
Welfare officers and medical examiners at the Kathmandu reception centers say that the rape of Tibetan women by Nepali police is very common. Fearing deportation, social ostracizing or, for nuns, expulsion from their order, the women typically do not report the rape.
The TWA calls for the government in Nepal to take action to end arbitrary arrest, public ally oppose deportation, ensure that police officers stop sexually assaulting female protesters, oppose the deportation of any Tibetan who faces the risk of persecution, and conduct investigations into sexual abuses taken place since the last CEDAW report.
So far, the report claims, "Nepali security has not refrained from reining in the Tibetan people in Nepal, especially the women, for expressing their resentment and exercising their basic human rights: freedom of speech and expression."