UN Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women

The United Nations Commission on Human Rights has created a number of special rapporteurs and working groups that address specific human rights violations or regions.  Special rapporteurs can have either thematic mandates, such as violence against women, or regional mandates, such as the Former Yugoslavia.  Working Groups may focus on drafting international law or on certain human rights issues, such as the right to development.  These mechanisms have been very effective in bringing urgent human rights issues to the attention of the UN and the international community.  

In 1994, the Commission on Human Rights appointed Radhika Coomaraswamy, from Sri Lanka, to the position of Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women, Including Its Causes and Consequences.  The Special Rapportuer collects and analyzes data on violence against women in order to recommend measures to be taken at the international, regional and national level.  The mandate of the Special Rapporteur has three elements:

(1) Collection of information on violence against women and its causes and consequences from a variety of sources, including government and intergovernmental organizations, specialized agencies and non-governmental organizations (NGOs);

(2) Recommendation of measures at the international, regional and national levels to eliminate violence against women;

(3) Cooperation with other special rapporteurs, working groups and experts of the Commission on Human Rights.

The Special Rapporteur has conceptualized violence against women as occurring in three spheres:  in the family (including domestic violence and marital rape); in the community (including sexual assault; sexual harassment in the workplace and in educational institutions and trafficking for purposes of sexual exploitation); and violence perpetrated or condoned by the State (including custodial violence, sexual assault during armed conflict and violence against refugee women).

The mechanism for submitting complaints to the Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women is summarized below.



Complaint mechanism- Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women

Type of Mechanism

Complaint- information

Scope of the Procedure

“gender-specific” acts of violence, meaning acts or threats of violence directed against women because they are women or acts of violence which affect women disproportionately

Who can Submit a Complaint?

Individuals or NGOs

Role of Advocates

NGOs can submit complaints and can otherwise contact the Special Rapporteur about issues of concern.  NGOs can submit pertinent information to any and all of the special rapporteurs and working groups that are investigating specific human rights violations. 

Available Remedies

No individual remedies but the Special Rapporteur can request that national governments take action to remedy part abuses or prevent future human rights violations.  The Special Rapporteur can transmit an urgent appeal to a specific government about either a general or an individual allegation of abuse.  State governments then communicate with the Special Rapporteur about measures taken to remedy the human rights violation(s).

How to Submit

a Complaint

Complaints may be submitted by individuals or by organizations, such as NGOs.

There is no formal process for submitting a complaint to the Special Rapporteur.  The Special Rapporteur, however, has prepared a Model Complaint Form which sets forth the information is a guide to the relevant information which should be included.

In addition, it may be useful to consider some general guidelines in writing complaints, although the Special Rapporteur does not follow strict admissibility criteria.

Where to Send Communications

The Special Rapporteur on Violence against Women
The Office of the High Commissioner for Human Rights
United Nations
1211 Genève 10
Switzerland

Tel: + 41 22 917 9000
Fax: + 41 22 917 9006
E-mail:  csaunders.hchr@unog.ch

How the Complaint Procedure Works

When the Special Rapporteur receives a reliable and credible complaint that is within her mandate, she can take a number of actions.

The Special Rapporteur can communicate with the government concerned, asking for a response.  The Special Rapporteur can also urge the government to investigate the case, to prosecute and to provide protection and relief to the victim. 

If a complaint alleges that a human rights abuse is imminent, the Special Rapporteur can send an urgent appeal to request that the government prevent the violation.

There are no specific deadlines for submitting complaints to the Special Rapporteur, but each year she issues an annual report.  NGOs should, therefore, submit information by the end of October each year in order to be included in this report.

The Special Rapporteur may also schedule visits to a particular country, with the invitation of the national government.  In this case, NGOs can contact her in advance and can arrange to meet her or provide her with specific information about the situation for women in the country.  After a visit, the Special Rapporteur will submit a report on her findings and recommendations to the Commission on Human Rights.

Advantages/ Disadvantages

The Special Rapporteur has been very open to receiving information from NGOs in a less formal manner than other UN bodies.  The Special Rapporteur can also respond more quickly than other enforcement mechanisms to bring issues to the attention of the UN.

The Commission on Human Rights generally does not implement the recommendations that the Special Rapporteur includes in her reports.  Also, the special rapporteurs in general do not have sufficient resources to follow-up after country visits.  

Adapted in part from Women’s Human Rights Step by Step, Women Law & Development International and Human Rights Watch Women’s Rights Project (1997).

Additional Resources

The UN website contains a page on the Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women, which includes reports, NGO statements, draft resolutions and press releases.

UN Fact Sheet 27, Seventeen Frequently Asked Questions about United Nations Special Rapporteurs, provides background information into the mandate of the rapporteurs generally.  Most UN Fact Sheets can be accessed on the web.

Frontline, an Irish NGO, has created a Human Rights Defenders Manual, which includes detailed information on both the Special Rapporteur on Violence Against Women and also special rapporteurs in general, including the complaint mechanism.  This information can be accessed through information about specific human rights violations.

 

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