[Congressional Record Volume 159, Number 35 (Tuesday, March 12, 2013)]
[Senate]
[Page S1704]
From the Congressional Record Online through the Government Publishing Office [www.gpo.gov]
INTERNATIONAL WOMEN'S DAY
Mrs. SHAHEEN. Madam President, the world came together once again
last week to celebrate International Women's Day. Today I want to
belatedly commemorate that special day here on the floor of the Senate
and welcome the passage of this year's International Women's Day
resolution, which I am proud to say that I cosponsored on a bipartisan
basis with my colleague Senator Collins, and we had 14 other cosponsors
on that resolution.
International Women's Day is observed all over the world. It honors
the economic, political, and social achievements of women past,
present, and future. It also highlights just how far women around the
world still have to go and the many barriers and closed doors they
continue to face in the fight for equal rights and opportunities.
I want to recognize and celebrate this year's nine recipients of the
2013 State Department International Women of Courage Awards. This
prestigious annual award recognizes women who have shown exceptional
leadership in advocating for women's rights and empowerment around the
globe, often at great risk to their own well-being.
One of those recipients I want to talk about is Razan Zeitunah. She
is a human rights lawyer in Syria, and she has made it her mission to
track the ongoing atrocities that have been committed by the Assad
regime. Mrs. Zeitunah was forced into hiding after the government
accused her of being a foreign agent when she began reporting on these
atrocities. Despite living in fear for her life, with her husband in
prison, Mrs. Zeitunah continues to risk so much to make sure the world
knows all about Assad's brutal crackdown on the people of Syria.
She is one of nine remarkable women who are being honored by the
State Department this year, each with an equally inspirational story to
tell.
I ask unanimous consent to have printed in the Record the names of
all nine honorees.
There being no objection, the material was ordered to be printed in
the Record, as follows:
Malalai Bahaduri
Tsering Woeser
Julieta Castellanos
Nirbhaya ``Fearless''
Dr. Josephine Obiajulu Odumakin
Elena Milashina
Fartuun Adan
Razan Zeitunah
Ta Phong Tan
Mrs. SHAHEEN. While I am very pleased that the Senate was able to
take up and pass the International Women's Day resolution last night, I
am also extremely disappointed that this bipartisan resolution was
objected to at the eleventh hour over a clause that addressed the
impact of our changing climate on women in developing nations, and I
just want to read that clause.
Whereas, according to the International Union for
Conservation of Nature, women in developing countries are
disproportionately affected by changes in climate because of
their need to secure water, food, and fuel for their
livelihood.
That was the extent of the clause that was objected to.
Unfortunately, this clause from the resolution was blocked by a Member
of the Senate on the other side of the aisle. It was a clause that was
included in the 2011 resolution that unanimously passed in the Senate.
Just this past weekend, Navy Admiral Locklear, the commander of the
U.S. Pacific Command, was asked during a 2-day trip to New England what
was the biggest long-term security threat facing the Pacific region.
His answer was very clear: climate change--this from an admiral who is
dealing with a bellicose North Korea and escalating conflict between
Japan and China in the East China Sea. His answer to what is the
biggest threat to America is climate change. Yet we have one of our
colleagues on the other side of the aisle who objected to a clause that
points out what is very clear in data around the world, and that is the
impact changes in our climate are having on women who are so often the
food gatherers for their families.
This issue of climate change is not going away anytime soon. We can
deny that it exists, but it exists. The data is clear, and I believe we
need to come together to address this serious concern to help other
countries find ways of mitigating the harmful effects of climate
change.
Just as climate change deserves attention, we also need to continue
our effort to promote equal rights and equal opportunities for women
everywhere. We know that all of society benefits when women are more
fully integrated into their communities and countries, and we need to
remain focused on this effort. That is why International Women's Day is
so important, and that is why passing a resolution to talk about that
in this body is so important.
I am sorry we couldn't agree on everything, but I do think it is
important for us to recognize International Women's Day and also to
point out areas of disagreement that clearly are going to remain at the
forefront in the future.
I yield the floor.
The PRESIDING OFFICER. The Senator from Oklahoma.
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