Peace for the World

Peace for the World
First democratic leader of Justice the Godfather of the Sri Lankan Tamil Struggle: Honourable Samuel James Veluppillai Chelvanayakam

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

Sunila has given to the world, now it’s time to give to her!

El  texto en Espanol sigue a continuacion del Ingles-

Tuesday, May 21, 2013

We are writing to ask you to join a solidarity effort for our dear friend Sunila Abeysekera, a leading women’s human rights defender, who is in a life struggle with cancer.
YouCaring.com - Free Online FundraisingSunila has been a lifelong feminist and human rights activist in Sri Lanka and South Asia, and a major player in the global women’s movement (see bio below). She is currently based at the Institute for Social Studies in The Netherlands as the recipient of a Scholars At Risk fellowship. These fellowships are awarded to individuals who face potential violence in their own country as a result of their human rights work.
Sunila has lived a courageous life on the forefront of many social movements, fighting relentlessly for justice and human rights—for women and on behalf of all those who experience identity-based discrimination, persecution and marginalization.  She has nurtured and supported countless women and men of all ages the world over, inspiring many-both directly and by example-to challenge abusive authority at the local, national and international levels.
Sunila was diagnosed with late stage cancer in the Netherlands in November 2012 and has been receiving treatment there.  At this point she is weighing options about where to receive treatment—likely in South Asia. She faces the prospect of significant-and possibly protracted-uncovered medical, travel and living costs in this fight for her life. What Sunila is facing now is the lot of many other activists—whose lives fighting for social justice often precludes their ability to focus on their own well-being and financial security.

We are reaching out to Sunila’s beloved community of friends and colleagues around the world to ensure that cost is not an obstacle preventing her from getting the best care possible. It is difficult to know exactly how much will be needed, but we are seeking to raise US $25,000 this month to ensure she does not have to worry about the expenses. She has given to the world, now it’s time to give to her.
Please donate on this site!
Kamla Bhasin, Charlotte Bunch, Roxanna Carrillo, Amrita Chhachhi,
Susanna George, Kumi Samuel

If questions, email SunilaSolidarity@gmail.com
BIOGRAPHY:  Sunila Abeysekera’s unique and highly valued work on feminism and human rights is based on her combination of grounded local involvement in Sri Lanka, significant contributions to struggles in the Asia Pacific region, and international advocacy.
Over the past 40 years, Sunila has been deeply committed to seeking justice and redress for human rights abuses in Sri Lanka as well as globally. Her work places a special emphasis on gender and peace building and has included documenting the impact of conflict on civilians, introducing nonviolent strategies of conflict transformation and challenging impunity to hold perpetrators accountable [http://www.opendemocracy.net/5050/sunila-abeysekera/brutal-manifestation-of-patriarchy]. She also addressed a broad range of other issues, ranging from violence against women to sexual and reproductive rights, including the rights of communities such as sex workers, people living with HIV/AIDS, and lesbian, gay, and transgender people.
Sunila began her work as a Human Rights Defender in the mid 1970s as part of Sri Lanka’s first autonomous human rights organization – the Civil Rights Movement (CRM) – a nonpartisan, interethnic organization set up to protect the rights of young men and women who led the 1971 youth movement. Since the late 1970s, she has been a key member of numerous civil society groups as a feminist leader, an advocate, a resource person and a trainer.
In 1984, Sunila founded the Women and Media Collective in Colombo, through which she played a critical role in shaping feminist thinking in South Asia while at the same time strengthening solidarity and mobilising feminist activism in a wide range of struggles – from women’s rights in the Free-Trade Zone to equal wages for women workers in the tea plantations. She was a founder of Sri Lanka’s Pacific and Asia Women’s Forum and also mobilized in support of the Mothers’ Front to stand against state repression while helping to build Women for Peace to advocate for a political solution to the ethnic conflict in Sri Lanka.
As state repression and acts of terror by armed opposition groups increased in Sri Lanka, in 1990 Sunila took over the leadership of INFORM Human Rights Documentation Centre, a leading institution committed to monitoring and documenting human rights violations perpetrated by both state and non-state entities. In the 1990s, she was also the president of the Movement for Interracial Justice and Equality in Sri Lanka, and a member of the Executive Committee of the Movement for Free and Fair Elections. Throughout the protracted conflict in Sri Lanka, Sunila continued to work across deep ethnic divides and to insist on a politically negotiated settlement to the country’s ethnic conflict.
Sunila has brought to her local and national activism an international perspective, making friends and linkages and building solidarities with feminists and struggles across borders – from Peru to Indonesia, from India to the USA, and from Mexico to Nairobi.
In the Asia-Pacific region, she has been closely associated with APWLD (Asia Pacific Forum on Women Law and Development), SANGAT (South Asian Network of Gender Activists and Trainers), Forum Asia (Asian Forum for Human Rights and Development) and served as Executive Director of the International Women’s Rights Action Watch Asia Pacific (IWRAW-AP) from 2008 to 2010.
In the international arena, Sunila played a crucial role in the global feminist campaign that led to the recognition that women’s rights are human rights at the UN World Conference on Human Rights in Vienna in 1993, and at other UN World Conferences in the 1990s and especially the Beijing World Conference on Women in 1995 [http://www.opendemocracy.net/5050/sunila-abeysekera/challenging-ourselves-at-beijing-15].  She engaged in debates around the Rome Statute of the International Criminal Court to ensure inclusion of gender perspectives and worked on implementation of the UN Security Council Resolution 1325 (on women’s participation in peace negotiations and in post-conflict reconstruction). She was a member of the Global Civil Society Advisory Board to the UN Development Program (UNDP), and is a member of the Women, Peace and Security Expert Group convened by UN Women in South Asia.
In the mid-2000s, Sunila was a key organizer in building the Women Human Rights Defenders International Coalition, an advocacy network that raises the visibility of gender in work for  defenders, creates support for them and documents the  violations they face. She was a member of the coordinating committee of the Feminist Dialogues at various World Social Forums, an initiative that facilitated feminist advocates meeting transnationally.
In 2002, she joined the feminist International Initiative on Justice in Gujarat, India, working with Indian feminists to seek redress for women from Muslim communities, victimized during the Gujarat carnage. She worked with women human rights defenders in many places including the Indian Northeast, Uganda, and Timor Leste.  In the aftermath of the South Asian tsunami, Sunila was intensely involved ensuring that women’s needs were addressed in the humanitarian crisis facing the region. Sunila served on the Board of Urgent Action Fund for Women’s Human Rights from 2005 to 2012 and, until recently, was its Chair.
Sunila’s invaluable contributions as one of South Asia’s preeminent human rights activists have been recognized internationally. In 1998, she received the UN Secretary General’s Award for Human Rights from Kofi Annan. She was honoured by Human Rights Watch, with its Human Rights Defender Award in 2007. She was also nominated in 2005 as one of the One Thousand Women for the Nobel Peace Prizehttp://www.1000peacewomen.org/eng/friedensfrauen_biographien_gefunden.php?WomenID=1049 ]
A single mother, Sunila humorously noted on receiving the UN Human Rights Prize from Kofi Annan that “At last my children will see that what I do is recognized as worthwhile!” Sunila’s unique brand of human rights activism, nationally and internationally, has been paralleled by a creative life in the fields of cinema, theatre, music and literary criticism.
Her work highlighting state and non-state violations during the last years of Sri Lanka’s ethnic war in 2009/2010 compelled Sunila to leave the country again, and she is currently affiliated with the Institute for Social Studies in the Netherlands as a “Scholar at Risk.”

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Te escribo para pedirte que apoyes esta campaña de solidaridad por mi querida amiga y compañera, Sunila Abeysekera, una lider defensora de los derechos humanos, que libra una batalla contra el cancer. Estamos tratando de conseguir US $25,000 dolares este mes para cubrir costos medicos, de viaje y gastos adicionales en esta lucha por su vida.  La situacion que Sunila enfrenta en este momento es similar a la de muchas otras activistas cuya vida de entrega por la justicia social afecta con frecuencia su capacidad para  concentrarse en obtener su propio bienestar y seguridad financiera. Me dirijo a ti porque conozco tu compromiso con las causas que Sunila ha defendido toda su vida. Por favor haz tu donacion  a la siguiente direccion  http://www.youcaring.com/sunila-solidarity 
Sunila es una feminista y activista por los derechos humanos en Sri Lanka y el Asia del Sur, y una figura en el movimiento global de las mujeres (su biodata esta en la pagina web que se indica en el parrafo anterior). Actualmente ella se encuentra en el Instituto de Estudios Sociales en Holanda como recipiente  de la beca Scholars at Risk. Estas becas se otorgan a individuos que corren el riesgo de represion en su propio pais como resultado de su trabajo en defensa de los derechos humanos. Su trabajo ha merecido el reconocimiento de muchas organizaciones, entre ellos el Premio de Derechos Humanos que entrega las Naciones Unidas, distincion que le fue otorgada por Kofi Annan, y en el 2008  el premio que le dio Human Rights Watch  por su trabajo como Defensora de los DDHH.
Sunila ha vivido su vida con un coraje y valor ejemplares, siempre a la vanguardia de los movimientos sociales mas importantes de nuestra epoca — por las mujeres y a nombre de todos aquellos que viven situaciones discriminatorias, de persecucion  o marginacion en base a su identidad. Ella ha acogido y apoyado a innumerables hombres y mujeres de todas las edades alrededor del mundo, inspirando a muchos -directamente o con su ejemplo- sobre como desafiar el abuso de autoridad de todo pelaje tanto a nivel local, national o internacional.
Gracias por tu apoyo!