行为人国公民的倡议:向联合国人权机构倡导幸存者的权利

Mina Watanabe
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引用次数: 1

摘要

关心此事的日本公民采取了各种行动,要求日本政府对二战期间日本军队性奴役制度(委婉地称为“慰安妇”制度)下犯下的罪行和侵犯人权行为负责。20世纪90年代初,日本公民加入了由“慰安妇”制度的受害者/幸存者及其在受害国的支持者发起的赔偿运动。市民和学者们开始进行真相调查,律师们支持受害者向日本政府提起诉讼。在国际人权机构方面,为了使日本政府在国际人权法下承担责任,早在1992年,律师Etsuro Totsuka先生就开始向当时的联合国人权委员会和当时的防止歧视及保护少数小组委员会提供信息。对妇女的暴力行为,特别是战争和武装冲突期间的强奸和性暴力,是20世纪90年代全球妇女运动最关注的问题之一。日本军队性奴役制度的受害者/幸存者在国际论坛上作证,不仅对妇女权利活动家,而且对专门从事人权法的人都起到了重要的推动作用。此后,联合国特别报告员、联合国人权条约机构和国际人权非政府组织就这一问题发表了一系列建议。日本战时暴力侵害妇女网络(VAWW-NET Japan)于2002年8月开始提交报告并游说联合国人权机构。2001年12月,妇女国际战争罪行法庭在荷兰海牙就日本军队性奴役问题作出最终判决。第一次提交的目的是通知联合国人类
本文章由计算机程序翻译,如有差异,请以英文原文为准。
Initiatives by Citizens of a Perpetrator State: Advocating to UN Human Rights Bodies for the Rights of Survivors
Concerned citizens in Japan have taken various actions in order to hold the government of Japan accountable for crimes and human rights violations committed during WWII under Japan’s military sexual slavery system, euphemistically called the “comfort women” system. In the early 1990s, citizens of Japan joined the redress movement initiated by the victims/survivors of the “comfort women” system and their supporters in victimized countries. Citizens and scholars began undertaking fact-finding research, while lawyers supported victims filing lawsuits against the Japanese government. With respect to international human rights bodies, in an attempt to make the government of Japan accountable under international human rights law, as early as 1992, attorney at-law, Mr Totsuka Etsuro, began providing information to the then-UN Commission on Human Rights and the then-Sub-Commission on Prevention of Discrimination and Protection of Minorities. Violence against women, especially rape and sexual violence during war and armed conflict, was one of the biggest concerns of global women’s movements in the 1990s. The victims/survivors of Japan’s military sexual slavery system who testified in international fora gave important impetus not only to women’s rights activists but also to those who specialized in human rights law. Since then, a number of recommendations on this matter have been issued by UN special rapporteurs, UN human rights treaty bodies and international human rights NGOs. The Violence Against Women in War Network Japan (VAWW-NET Japan)1 began submitting reports and lobbying UN Human Rights institutions in August 2002 following the December 2001 final judgement of the Women’s International War Crimes Tribunal for Japan’s Military Sexual Slavery delivered in The Hague, the Netherlands. The purpose of the first submission was to inform UN Human
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