CEDAW commends Denmark's achievements in implementation of Convention



UNITED NATIONS
Press Release

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COMMITTEE COMMENDS DENMARK'S ACHIEVEMENTS IN IMPLEMENTATION
OF WOMEN'S ANTI-DISCRIMINATION CONVENTION

Committee on Elimination of
Discrimination against Women
12 June 2002
561st and 562nd Meetings (AM & PM)

   Concerns Expressed, however, on Situation
   Of Migrants, Refugees, Ethnic Minorities, Asylum Seekers


   It seemed that there were two societies in Denmark -- that of the
   country's basic citizens, on the one hand, and that of migrants,
   refugees, ethnic minorities and asylum seekers, on the other, the
   Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women was
   told today.

   During a two-meeting review of Denmark's efforts to enhance gender
   equality, one of the Committee's 23 expert members said that for
   the first society, discrimination against women represented a minor
   problem. In the light of growing hostility towards migrants,
   however, he hoped that the situation of immigrant women was not a
   "myth of equality".

   During discussion today, members of the Committee -- charged with
   monitoring compliance with the Convention on the Elimination of All
   Forms of Discrimination against Women -- asked numerous questions
   about the situation of migrant and minority women in Denmark,
   including Kosovo refugees, and expressed concern about the
   advancement of women in the Danish territories of the Faroe Islands
   and Greenland. They were also concerned that Denmark's fourth and
   fifth periodic reports, which were considered today, contained more
   information about the country's plans under consideration than
   about concrete results and action.

   Several experts commended Denmark's achievements since it signed
   the Convention in 1980 and ratified it in 1983, saying that the
   Government had set an example for others in its efforts to combat
   violence against women and mainstream women's issues in its
   national policies. Applauding the country's comprehensive plan of
   action to stop violence against women and its research to address
   the causes of that problem, they nevertheless questioned its
   gender-neutral policies and recent decisions to stop funding
   several human rights institutions.

   It was pointed out that the mandate of the Committee and the
   responsibility of the State party related to the elimination of
   discrimination against women, and it was important to dwell on the
   discriminatory practices directed against them. For that reason,
   the gender-neutral presentation of the material before the
   Committee was not quite proper, an expert commented.

   A speaker said that the neutral character of the country's
   immigration act represented a problem. As a comprehensive effort,
   gender mainstreaming should include consideration of so-called
   gender-neutral legislation, which prevented women from receiving
   specific treatment when they needed it.

   An expert noted that at 37 per cent, the number of women in the
   country's Parliament was impressive. But other figures indicated a
   "rather anaemic character" of affirmative gender action in Denmark.
   Only 5 per cent of women were in private-sector managerial
   positions, for example. Women did not have a fair share of
   decision-making positions, and she wanted to know if the Government
   intended to take action to rectify that situation and eliminate
   discrimination in both the private and public sectors.

   Introducing Denmark's reports and responding to questions, the
   Deputy General Secretary in the Ministry for Gender Equality,
   Vibeke Abel, said that the country had complied with many of the
   requests expressed by experts during the country's previous
   reviews. Those related to violence against women, trafficking in
   human beings, women's unemployment, and the gender-segregated
   labour market. Denmark was now closer to the goals of gender
   equality than ever before.

   Regarding women from ethnic minorities, she said that only 41 per
   cent of them were active in the Danish labour market. The
   Government was aware that it still had to overcome many challenges
   before that group could reach the same rate as Danish women -- 75
   per cent. For that reason, special efforts were made to integrate
   minorities in the labour market. Also, out of concern over forced
   marriages and to ensure ethnic women's and men's right to freely
   choose a spouse, the Danish Government had recently raised the age
   limit for family reunification with spouses to 24 years.

   Dissatisfied with that response, one of the experts said such a
   decision represented serious discrimination, because the age of
   marriage for Danish citizens was 18.

   The country representatives further explained that both the age of
   marriage and reunification applied to everybody, without
   distinction. For both citizens and non-citizens, those ages were 18
   and 24, respectively.

   Many experts also commented on the low number of women professors
   in the country, despite the fact that there were up to 50 per cent
   of women among the applicants for those posts. They further
   commented on the need to fully integrate the country's domestic
   legislation with the Convention.

   Also responding to comments and questions from the floor were the
   following members of the Danish delegation: Ulla Lehmann Nielsen
   and Trine Lund Pedersen of the Ministry of Foreign Affairs; Agnete
   Andersen of the Ministry of Employment; Kristianna Winther Poulsen
   of the Faroese Representative Council; Susanne Clausen of the
   Ministry of Integration Affairs; Anne Kristine Axelsson of the
   Ministry of Justice; Vibeke Kold and Kira Appel of the Department
   of Gender Equality; Hanne Eskjaer Fugl and Nina Olsen of Denmark's
   Permanent Mission to the United Nations; and Marianna Lykke Thomsen
   of the Danish Embassy in Ottawa.

   At 10 a.m. tomorrow, 13 June, the Committee will hear replies from
   the delegation of Saint Kitts and Nevis to the questions raised by
   the experts on 5 June.


   Background

   The Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women
   met this morning to consider the fourth and fifth periodic reports
   of Denmark (documents CEDAW/C/DEN/4 and 5), submitted under article
   18 of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
   Discrimination against Women. By that article, States parties to
   the Convention submit reports on legislative, judicial,
   administrative and other measures adopted to give effect to the
   Convention's provisions. Denmark ratified the Convention in 1983.

   The fourth periodic report, which focuses primarily on the most
   important gender issues that have emerged through continuous debate
   at all levels of Denmark's society, updates information presented
   in the country's previous report -- not yet considered by the
   Committee -- on issues that include legislative changes, education
   initiatives and social support services, towards implementation of
   the Convention.

   According to the report, a major development since the Committee
   last examined Denmark's implementation efforts has been the
   amendment of the Equal Treatment Act of the Danish Constitution
   (Article 2). With the specific aim of ensuring equality between the
   sexes, that Act, along with four other laws covering equal pay,
   access to employment, appointments to public office and composition
   of public administration boards now more effectively addresses a
   wide range of the Convention's provisions.

   The report states that in order to modify the social and cultural
   patterns prohibiting a de facto equality in Danish society and to
   eliminate prejudices and customary practices based on the idea of
   women's inferiority, the Equal Status Council and various
   authorities and organizations had developed priorities which guided
   the work and formed the basis for the necessary strategies. Among
   the priorities so identified are:

   -- the situation in the labour market with the problems of equal
   remuneration and harmonization of working life and family life;

   -- the follow-up on the Fourth World Conference on Women;

   -- the National Plan of Action and plans of action for all public
   authorities, including the county and municipality level;

   -- international cooperation at the United Nations, the European
   and the Nordic level, as well as development cooperation with
   countries in the South; and

   -- enlargement of the circle of actors, as it was important to
   involve men and women and young people of both sexes more actively
   in the gender-equality debate.

   However, those priorities might change as a result of the future
   work of the newly established Committee for Gender Equality, the
   report noted.

   Insofar as women in public life were concerned, Danish women and
   men enjoyed the same political rights, as both had the right to
   vote and were eligible for local government and the national
   Parliament, as well as for election to the European Parliament.
   Still, those bodies were, to a large extent, composed of a majority
   of men, indicating that women might not participate in political
   life on equal terms with men.

   In the Government formed after the parliamentary elections of
   September 1994, seven out of 20 ministers (or 35 per cent) were
   women. Compared with other European Union countries, Danish women
   topped the list of women's representation in the European
   Parliament. The Danish representative on the European Commission
   was a woman, said the report.

   As a whole, women were not well represented in the higher wage
   groups of the public services, and efforts to improve the situation
   were embodied in the action plans of ministries and other public
   institutions. Nor had women reached the top level in the military.
   Only a small percentage had chosen careers in the armed forces,
   according to the report. Although Danish women were not subject to
   conscription, they were now allowed employment in all ranks of the
   Home Guard and Armed Services, even if that involved direct
   participation in military operations or combat.

   Danish women enjoyed the same right as men to represent their
   Government at the international level, the report continues.
   However, their position in the Foreign Service meant they had
   limited prospects of participating in international meetings on the
   same footing as men. Although the Ministry of Foreign Affairs had a
   staff of nearly 1,500 -- almost evenly divided between men and
   women -- men were primarily the decision-makers. Of the top-level
   151 executives, women represented only 6 per cent. In the 40-42 age
   group, there was only one woman.

   To correct that imbalance, the Ministry had in late 1993 published
   its plan of action, "Equality in the Foreign Service by the Year
   200?", whose aim was to "change attitudes, ideas and traditional
   habits" in all staff categories, including the executive-level
   group.

   On education, the report noted that Denmark's education system was
   based on equity and equality. Education was compulsory for the
   first nine years, but more and more young people continued to
   higher levels.

   A gender-balanced labour market was seen as one of the most
   important goals for equality work in Denmark, and many efforts had
   been made to establish and adjust legislation based on equal pay
   and treatment. However, problems of gender equality still remained,
   the main ones being that the labour market continued to be
   gender-segregated; women were still the worst hit by unemployment;
   and full and equal participation of women and men in the workplace
   had still not yet been realized.

   The Ministry of Labour had initiated a pilot project on gender
   mainstreaming in the labour market. The Act on Equal Remuneration
   for Men and Women (Equal Pay Act) had not been amended since 1992.
   The report identified pensions as part of the problem of equal pay.
   In May 1996, the Equal Status Council held a conference at which
   pensions were discussed in relation to gender, age, lifetime,
   disablement, death of a spouse, and the differences in computing
   pension disbursements to women and men who had retired from the
   labour market.

   The report also considered topics such as the Equal Opportunities
   Act, social support services, and other legal and social efforts.

   It went on to say that trafficking in women and sexual exploitation
   were acts of gender-based violence which were not acceptable in
   Denmark. Although there were no rules or provisions that
   specifically made trafficking in women a criminal offence, it might
   be punishable under the Danish Aliens Act as people-smuggling; or
   under the Criminal Code as loss of liberty; as pimping and brothel
   activity, or as fraud. Attention to the issue had increased
   considerably since the last reporting.

   As a follow-up to the Beijing Platform of Action, some
   non-governmental women's organizations had included the problem in
   their agenda. The media had also highlighted certain cases,
   including cases involving foreign women, but police investigations
   did not provide any basis for charging the accused, the report
   said.

   While prostitution per se was not an illegal act, it was a
   punishable offence under the Criminal Code to tempt any person into
   prostitution or to live on the earnings of prostitution.

   In the second report introduced today, its fifth periodic report,
   Denmark said that equality between women and men was an overriding
   policy objective.

   Since 1996, Denmark had concentrated on strengthening the
   implementation of gender issues at different levels in Danish
   society, not the least of which was the follow-up to the Platform
   of Action of the 1995 Beijing Fourth World Conference on Women. The
   report noted that since 1976 successive governments had
   continuously worked to enlarge and improve de jure equality between
   women and men.

   Also as a follow-up to Beijing, the Government established a
   committee in March 1996 to consider an "institutional mechanism to
   promote gender equality". This would replace the existing
   mechanism, which was more than 20 years old and no longer
   considered adequate. Government ministries, trade unions and
   non-governmental organizations (NGOs) formed the committee, which
   analysed problems concerning the existing institutional set-up. It
   noted that the existing body, the Equal Status Council, had been
   coping with too many and too varied tasks -- such as judicial
   complaints, initiation of public debates, administrative support
   for the Prime Minister, responsibility for gender equality, and an
   information service for the public.

   In March 1999, the committee submitted an extensive report entitled
   "Working towards Gender Equality", covering some 40 themes and
   topics for promoting gender equality in Danish society. It also
   proposed reorganizing the existing gender equality institutions
   into three separate entities, dividing the previous portfolio in
   order to strengthen efforts and enhance the visibility of the
   issue. Following their debate in Parliament in May 1999,
   legislators supported the recommendations of the committee and
   proposed several measures the Government should undertake in that
   regard.

   In July 1999, the Prime Minister appointed a Minister for Gender
   Equality. In line with the principle of gender mainstreaming, all
   other ministries would still be responsible for securing gender
   equality within their sphere of activity.

   As a second step, a new bill was introduced in Parliament and
   adopted in May 2000. It established new institutional mechanisms on
   gender equality. The principle of gender mainstreaming was included
   in the legislation, and ministries would be given additional
   instruments for the promotion of equality. Every second year,
   reports on the status of equality would be issued.

   The report noted that Danish NGOs had traditionally played an
   active part in efforts to attain equality between women and men, as
   well as to combat gender discrimination and stereotypes. That work
   was spearheaded by the National Council of Women in Denmark
   (formerly the Danish Council of Women), the umbrella organization
   for 49 women's organizations, and the Danish Women's Society.

   The report added that Danish gender-equality policy during the
   reporting period had focused mainly on five areas:

   -- Equal pay and pensions;

   -- Women and power;

   -- Violence against women;

   -- Men and equality; and

   -- International cooperation

   Under the heading "Special Issues", the report noted the initiative
   by the Minister for Gender Equality to strengthen cooperation with
   ethnic minority women by involving them to a higher degree in
   democratic decision-making processes. The intention was to effect
   an equality policy formulated on the basis of the special condition
   of those women.


   Introduction of Reports

   VIBEKE ABEL, Deputy General Secretary of Denmark's Ministry for
   Gender Equality, said that her Government had been working to
   secure a national follow-up to the Platform for Action since the
   Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing in 1995. The Platform
   for Action had had a great impact on Danish gender-equality policy,
   including the promotion of the gender mainstreaming strategy.

   Many of the concerns raised since the last review of the situation
   in Denmark had been met, such as violence against women,
   trafficking in human beings, unemployment among women, and the
   gender-segregated labour market, she said. Denmark was now closer
   to its goal of formal equality, as well as de facto equality
   between women and men. Gender equality was essential for welfare
   and democracy in Danish society on, the one hand, and, on the
   other, a highly developed democracy and welfare society were
   essential preconditions for the high degree of gender equality that
   the country enjoyed.

   Ms. Abel said that Danish women had realized increased political
   empowerment, and now accounted for 44 per cent of the newly elected
   public council boards and committees. The share of women in the
   newly elected Parliament was now 38 per cent. The Government had
   also formulated a set of objectives for its gender-equality policy
   with the goal of ensuring that women and men were equal partners
   and had equal opportunities to choose how they wanted to live their
   lives.

   She said that the Minister for Gender Equality was obliged to
   present an annual report on gender equality before Parliament. The
   report reviewed the past year's initiatives and presented new ones
   for the following year. At the same time that Denmark handed in its
   fifth periodic report to the Committee in May 2000, Parliament had
   passed a new law on gender equality that contained many new
   elements. They included the abolition of the Council for Gender
   Equality, which was then replaced by a new Ministry for Gender
   Equality; the creation of a Knowledge Centre for Gender Equality;
   and establishment of the Gender Equality Board.

   She noted that the most important step was the appointment of a
   Minister for Gender Equality, which had made gender equality part
   of the Government's overall policies, and its influence on
   political decision-making processes had, as a result, increased.

   She said that all public authorities were obliged to mainstream a
   gender perspective into their area of work. The Ministry for Gender
   Equality was coordinating those mainstreaming efforts. Further, it
   was currently developing a set of indicators on violence against
   women. The indicators were a part of the annual European Union
   follow-up of the Beijing Platform for Action on the implementation
   of the 12 critical areas of concern to the Union's member States.

   She added that as a follow-up to the Platform for Action, the
   Government had intensified efforts to eliminate trafficking in
   human beings, especially women and children. There was a broad
   consensus in the Danish Parliament on the need to prioritize this
   "completely unacceptable phenomenon", which violated victims'
   rights and allowed the spread of organized crime.

   In February 2002, the Government had presented a bill on new
   legislation concerning trafficking in human beings. With the
   adoption of the bill this past May, Parliament had agreed to
   ratification of the Protocol to Prevent, Suppress and Punish
   Trafficking in Persons, Especially Women and Children. The Act
   contained a newly constructed provision on all aspects of
   trafficking in human beings, and set the maximum sentence for
   violation of the new provision at eight years' imprisonment.

   The Government had introduced a range of new initiatives to promote
   the reconciliation of family life and working life, including
   longer parental leave schemes, grants for parents, guaranteed day
   care, and access to part-time work in all parts of the labour
   market. She said that only 41 per cent of women from ethnic
   minorities participated in the labour market, and the Government
   was aware that there were still many challenges to overcome before
   this group reached the same rate of participation as Danish women
   of 75 per cent. That was why the Government had made a special
   effort to integrate women and men from ethnic minorities on the
   labour market, she said.

   There had also been increasing focus on forced marriages, and the
   Government found it important to ensure ethnic women's and men's
   rights to freely choose a spouse and enter voluntarily into
   marriage. In order to combat forced marriages, the Government, in a
   newly adopted bill, had raised the age limit for family
   reunification with spouses from 18 to 24.

   MARIANNE LYKKE THOMSEN, Minister Counsellor from Greenland, said
   that Greenland society had developed rapidly over the last 50
   years. It was today a modern democratic society that continued to
   improve the framework and conditions for equality among men and
   women through legislation that reflected those social changes.

   She said that new legislation included elements of mainstreaming
   and affirmative action, and would emphasize the commitment of the
   Greenland Parliament to countrywide gender equality. Two thirds of
   the employees in Greenland's two major workplaces –- the
   Government and the municipalities –- were women. Areas
   dominated by women included health, education and social affairs.

   Men were still a majority in higher-paying jobs and women a
   majority in lower-paying jobs, she said. In 2001, unemployment
   averaged 5.6 per cent for women and 6.7 per cent for men.

   Speaking on behalf of the Faroe Islands, KRISTIANNA WINTER POULSEN,
   Head of Section of the Ministry for Health and Social Affairs, said
   there were hardly any legislative obstacles in Faroese law to
   women's equal rights. In 1994, the Faroese Parliament had passed an
   Act on Equality between Men and Women which aimed at strengthening
   gender equality on the labour market, in education and in all
   public committees, councils and boards. However, the number of
   women elected to Parliament was limited, she said.

   She added that the Minister for Gender Equality in the Faroe
   Islands intended to provide a more thorough report on gender
   equality in Faroese society in Denmark's sixth report in 2004.

   In closing, Ms. ABEL said that Denmark looked forward to receiving
   the Committee's conclusions, and that the Minister for Gender
   Equality would ensure a national follow-up and debate.


   Experts' Comments

   Several experts commended the country for its extensive reports and
   efforts to mainstream gender issues in national policies. The
   Government of Denmark had set an example for others in its efforts
   to combat violence against women and mainstream women's issues in
   national policies. They applauded the Government's comprehensive
   action plan to stop violence against women and the research done in
   the country to address the causes of that problem. The high level
   of the delegation, which included representatives of the Faroe
   Islands and Greenland, they said, testified to Denmark's commitment
   to the implementation of the Convention.

   It was pointed out, however, that Denmark's Constitution contained
   no specific provision on discrimination against women, and there
   was no enforcement mechanism to ensure equality. It was important
   to fully integrate the country's domestic legislation with the
   Convention. It was true that the country's achievements were
   impressive, but certain gaps still remained, and such integration
   could help to address them. For example, although many women
   qualified for high academic positions, women accounted for only 6
   per cent of professors in the country's universities.

   It seemed that there were two societies in Denmark -- that of the
   country's basic citizens, on the one hand, and that of ethnic
   minorities, migrants, asylum seekers and refugees, on the other, an
   expert said. For the first one, discrimination against women
   represented a minor problem. In the light of growing hostility
   towards migrants, however, he hoped that the situation of immigrant
   women was not a "myth of equality".

   It was a known fact that violence and rape had been systematically
   used against Kosovo women who had sought refuge in Denmark at the
   end of the 1990s, for instance. Although they had lost their
   refugee status following an extended stay in the country, it was
   important to follow the principle of voluntary repatriation in
   dealing with them. Did the country consider it humane to force
   women to return to their country of origin against their will, even
   though they faced atrocities back home?

   Several speakers echoed that concern, asking for information about
   the country's mechanisms for migrant integration. A speaker said
   that the reports contained information about numerous proposals and
   recommendations regarding the situation of migrant women and
   minorities, but not about actions and results.

   An expert also wondered if the closure of several gender equality
   institutions in Denmark represented the abandonment of the women's
   cause by the country's new Government. Questions were asked about
   the closure of the board for ethnic equality, for example.

   Regarding violence against women, an expert said that despite the
   country's commendable efforts, more emphasis seemed to be placed on
   the victims, rather than perpetrators. Also, no statistics had been
   provided regarding the number of convictions for violence directed
   at women. Questions were also asked about new forms of abuse,
   including those through the use of Internet.

   It seemed that in its efforts, Denmark was paying more attention to
   the policies of the European Union and to the Beijing Platform of
   Action than to the provisions of the Convention, another speaker
   said. As a State party to the Convention, the country should base
   its policies on the principles of that international legal
   instrument.


   Country Responses

   On the repatriation of women from Bosnia and Kosovo, SUSANNE
   CLAUSEN, Head of the Department in the Ministry of Integration
   Affairs, said that Parliament had just enacted a new aliens act
   which would become law on 1 July this year. She said that a large
   number of women who had arrived in Denmark during the 1990s and
   just after the new millennium had been granted de facto resident
   status. The new law was gender-neutral and applied to men and women
   equally.

   Women who were rape victims before arriving in Denmark were also
   considered to qualify under this status, if the offence had been
   committed because of their race, origin, nationality or similar
   factors. When the new amendment became law on 1 July, Denmark would
   still continue to apply the Geneva Convention, to which it remained
   a party. The only difference would be that the de facto status
   would fall away once the new law came into force and granted
   protected status to asylum seekers who had been subjected to abuse
   in their countries of origin.

   In future asylum seekers who now received asylum based on
   "considerable" fear of such fates as torture and rape would no
   longer be eligible for refugee status. In such cases, Denmark would
   continue to grant them conventional status. They would also enjoy
   protected status, for example, if a woman risked being raped if she
   were returned to her country or origin.

   For immigrant women and men, asylum could be obtained under the new
   act and would be elaborated on in the next report.

   After 1 July this year, the age limit for spousal reunification
   would be raised to 24 years from the present 18. This would be
   applied to men, as well as women, in order to prevent forced
   marriages. That was not the only tool that the Government could
   apply in the continuing struggle against forced marriages, she went
   on. The Government would also seek to strengthen measures against
   family violence, for instance.

   On integration of immigrant women into Danish society, Ms. ABEL
   said that there was in place a three-year introduction programme,
   which provided special Danish language training, information on
   access to the labour market and a special Danish society
   integration training course. There was yet another special
   programme to prevent women having their residence permits revoked
   if they could prove that the reason they left their marriages was
   due to violence.

   In response to a participant's question, she said that Denmark was
   promoting research into and providing information on human rights
   by assisting victims of discrimination. There were also Danish
   women's and men's organizations which had, for many years,
   functioned as watchdogs. Asked why the Knowledge Centre had been
   closed, she said that was largely because the work the Centre did
   was also being done by many other institutions and organizations in
   the country.

   Asked whether the board for the new Centre would continue to have
   the same political influence in its new role, she said that the
   board would continue to network, and its influence would,
   therefore, be even more direct than in the past.

   Continuing, she said that gender equality work in Denmark was not
   just a women's struggle. There were also many male organizations
   dealing with gender equality issues.

   ANNE KRISTINE AXELSSON, Head of Section at the Ministry of Justice,
   said that, as stated in the report, the Danish Constitution of 1953
   contained no specific provisions on equality of women and men, but
   it contained articles proclaiming equal treatment of all citizens.
   As one of the first States parties to join the Convention and its
   Optional Protocol, Denmark was trying to fully implement the
   treaty. Human rights conventions ratified by Denmark became part of
   the country's law. They could be referred to by legal authorities
   and invoked in Danish courts.

   Regarding the new bill on trafficking in women, she said that it
   had been presented to the Parliament in February and adopted by the
   Government last month. The new instrument was in compliance with
   the European Union's framework decision on the matter, ensuring a
   maximum eight-year sentence for the offence. Under aggravated
   circumstances, the sentence could be extended to 12 years. Under
   the Nordic-Baltic agreement, a task force had been created to
   combat smuggling in human beings and trafficking in women. All
   Baltic and Nordic countries had taken part in a recent seminar on
   trafficking in women, which addressed the issues of cooperation in
   fighting that crime. Denmark also participated in other
   international efforts to combat trafficking in women.

   As mentioned in the presentation, in March 2001 the Danish
   Government had initiated a new plan of action to combat violence
   against women, she continued. She described the provisions of the
   country's criminal code regarding abusive and violent behaviour,
   and added that treatment and preventive programmes were also under
   way under the new plan. The country was participating in an
   international survey on the matter, and national statistics were
   being collected on the position, age and gender of victims. In the
   future, it was expected that information regarding offenders would
   also be included.

   Regarding cultural attitudes towards violence, KIRA APPEL, Head of
   Section of the Department for Gender Equality, said that violence
   was an expression of male dominance towards women. An increasing
   number of women were economically independent, however, and more
   women were now able to leave violent situations at home. The action
   plan did focus on the perpetrators and the need to break the circle
   of violence through a change in attitudes.

   The national plan on violence was based on a three-pronged attitude
   of prevention, protection and prosecution, she added. As for
   trafficking in women, there was focus on both the demand and supply
   sides of that phenomenon.

   Turning to the issue of pornography, she said that the Ministry of
   Justice was responsible for the penal aspects of the problem. It
   was a crime to distribute pornography to children under 16. There
   was also emphasis on parental responsibility for preventing child
   exposure to pornography through the Internet. An assessment was
   also under way to determine whether it was necessary to strengthen
   legislation to prevent the spread of pornography through new means
   of communication. To ensure that children were not watching
   pornographic materials on television, such programmes had been
   relegated to late hours.

   Regarding incest, she said that a number of initiatives had been
   undertaken, and research had been conducted. A national centre for
   abused children had been established, where they could receive
   treatment and support.

   Ms. ABEL added that consultations had been initiated with various
   players to exchange views regarding sexual exploitation of
   children, and the country would include more information on the
   matter in its next report.

   Ms. LIEHMANN NIELSEN said that the country was aware of the need to
   reduce poverty, placing emphasis on women in that regard. The
   country was planning poverty-reduction strategies, including in
   developing countries. Access to trade opportunities, health and
   education were among the priorities in that connection.


   Expert Response

   An expert expressed concern that having become an independent
   foundation, the research centre on gender issues "was going to be
   even more independent" now, according to the country's answer, and
   that it would no longer benefit from State funding. As a result,
   the centre might be compelled to concentrate on income-generating
   projects, and that could have a negative effect on its activities.
   Research was a very important aspect of achieving gender equality,
   and several speakers wondered about the reasons for the changes.

   Also according to the delegation's response, she added, the country
   had raised the age of marriage for immigrants to 24 years in order
   to prevent forced marriage. That was serious discrimination,
   because the age of marriage for Danish citizens was 18.

   Questioning Denmark's gender-neutral policies, an expert noted
   that, at
   37 per cent, the number of women in the country's Parliament was
   impressive. However, other figures indicated a "rather anaemic
   character" of affirmative gender action. Women accounted for only 5
   per cent in managerial positions in the private sector, for
   example. Women did not occupy a fair share in decision-making
   positions, and she wanted to know if the Government intended to
   take actions to rectify that situation and eliminate discrimination
   in both the private and public sectors.

   Another speaker said that the neutral character of the country's
   immigration act represented a problem. As a comprehensive effort,
   gender mainstreaming should include consideration of so-called
   gender-neutral legislation, which prevented women from receiving
   specific treatment when they needed it.

   Did the Ministry for Gender Equality intend to take up the issue of
   incorporating the Convention in domestic law? an expert asked. How
   often had the Convention been invoked in the country's courts?

   A speaker observed that the Danish Centre for Human Rights had been
   in existence for 30 years, and it was not quite clear how the new
   arrangements were functioning. Another expert said that, according
   to the reports, the number of battered women in Denmark was
   increasing, and that fact was in conflict with the lack of cases
   involving domestic violence in the country's courts.

   Regarding stereotypes, one would assume that prejudices in regard
   to women would be a thing of the past, an expert said. According to
   the NGO report, which was attached to the country's report, there
   was a rise in negative attitudes towards women. What was being done
   by the Government to deal with that problem?

   Questions were also raised about the occurrence of paedophilia and
   prosecution of such offences. It was also pointed out that there
   was a difference in what had been achieved in Denmark itself and in
   the Faroe Islands. What were the Government's responsibilities
   there?

   One expert wanted to know what changes and improvements had been
   made to the laws, and what impact those would have on punishing
   both the prostitute and the pimp. She also wondered how the extent
   of exploitation was measured. In order to protect women engaged in
   prostitution, the tendency should be to penalize those engaged in
   pimping even more heavily, she said.

   On trafficking in women, she said that although a working group
   established by the Ministry for Gender Equality had been referred
   to widely throughout the report, there was no mention of what
   government departments like the police and the judiciary were
   doing. She, therefore, wanted to know how those who engaged in
   trafficking women were punished, and what role the justice and
   police departments played.

   Yet another speaker, while commending Denmark's work on preparing
   comprehensive reports, sought clarification on how many women
   "trapped" in violent marriages had benefited from the new laws, if
   indeed any such assessment had been undertaken.


   Responses

   Ms. ABEL explained that more comprehensive information on Greenland
   would be included in future reports.

   She said that the Ministry of Justice had in 1999 appointed a
   committee to look into incorporation of several general human
   rights conventions into Danish law by examining the advantages and
   disadvantages of such an incorporation. One of the conventions to
   be looked at was the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
   Discrimination against Women, among the three other United Nations
   conventions that came under the Committee's purview. A separate
   paper summarizing the recommendations was available to
   participants, she said. It had also been widely distributed within
   governments, NGOs, and the private sector for observations and
   comments with a view to refining it further.

   Continuing, Ms. Abel said that much progress had been achieved
   during the period under review, and many concrete examples of the
   country's efforts were presented in the reports. As a result of the
   implementation of gender equality policies by the Danish
   Government, women's participation in the labour market stood at 75
   per cent; most of the children were in public day-care
   institutions. As a result of the creation of new structures, the
   country now had a Minister for Gender Equality, and anyone who felt
   she was discriminated against had free access to lawyers. Gender
   machinery received significant budgetary funding of 18.4 million
   kroner ($2.5 million). The budget for the action plan on violence
   was over 50 million kroner ($6.2 million).

   Ms. AXELSSON then reiterated that the Convention could be invoked
   by domestic courts. The issue of its incorporation in domestic law
   was now under consideration and, at this point, it was too early to
   predict what the decision would be.

   Regarding prostitution, she said that in 1999 the Parliament had
   amended the criminal code to decriminalize prostitution and passive
   pimping, allowing for the prostitutes' legal cohabitation with men.
   Any sexual exploitation, as well as trafficking in people, was
   criminalized. In 2000, the police had started systematic monitoring
   of the situation. Danish authorities also took part in the
   activities of Interpol, Europol and Baltic structures to stop any
   illegal trafficking in women.

   Turning to ethnic minorities, Ms. APPEL emphasized that the
   condition of equality applied to all citizens of Denmark, without
   exception. She added that there were different gender patterns as
   far as women and men belonging to ethnic minorities were concerned.
   The Government was making significant efforts to address that
   problem. In some respects, the situation of second-generation
   ethnic minority women was better than that of men. However, most
   victims seeking help in crisis centres belonged to ethnic
   minorities and, for that reason, the plan of action on violence
   addressed their needs as a matter of priority. An information
   pamphlet and a Web site were being prepared in all relevant
   languages to inform ethnic minority women of their rights and
   sources of help. Volunteers in crisis centres were being trained to
   meet their needs.

   VIBEKE KOLD, of the Department for Gender Equality, said that male-
   dominated stereotypes and cultural norms needed to be changed in
   order to fight discrimination in the workplace. Projects had been
   initiated in order to break the "glass ceiling" in education and
   research. Despite a growing number of women in research, most of
   the country's scientists were still men. The tools to support women
   included affirmative action, including gender-based scholarships.

   AGNETE ANDERSEN, Special Adviser, Ministry of Employment, said that
   values of equality were extremely important in Danish society. It
   was important for women to be respected and not over-protected from
   the labour market point of view. In recent years, the Parliament
   had debated many aspects of equality, and legislative norms had
   been amended many times. Women were protected against
   discrimination in society, in general, and in the labour market, in
   particular.

   The country's labour markets were very "equality friendly", she
   said. Part-time work was decreasing, and women's salaries were
   growing. However, the pay gap and the gender-segregated labour
   market still remained, and it was still important to reconcile
   women's lives in the labour market and at home. Also high on the
   agenda was the question of welfare.

   Being very careful about the issue, Denmark did not call many of
   its initiatives affirmative action, even if other countries did so.
   The new general act on equality would incorporate many positive
   actions in the legislation, however, and she expected the new
   regulations of the European Union to contribute to the advancement
   of women, as well.

   ULLA LEHMANN NIELSEN emphasized that Denmark believed the
   Convention to be of utmost importance for promoting gender
   equality. Therefore, as a matter of routine, it examined other
   State parties' reservations to that instrument; if it found them
   unjustified, it filed its objections to them. The Government had
   recently financed a publication on the Convention. It also found
   the Beijing Platform of Action most useful, for it contained many
   provisions that facilitated specific measures for the advancement
   of women.

   Regarding the age of spouse reunification, Ms. CLAUSEN, Head of
   Department in the Ministry of Integration Affairs, said that the
   age of 24 applied to all citizens of Denmark and foreigners living
   in Denmark. The age of marriage was 18 for everybody.

   Regarding residency requirements for women living in violent
   marriages, she said that in 1999 the Danish immigration service had
   refrained from revoking 13 residence permits in cases when women
   were divorced from violent men. The following year, 20 permits were
   accorded the same treatment. In general, a permanent residence
   permit was now issued after three years in the country. A woman
   subjected to violence was not obliged to stay in a violent marriage
   to obtain a permanent residence permit.


   Experts' Comments, Questions and Answers


   One expert commented on the new law relating to forced marriages,
   which she thought was discriminatory since most such marriages
   applied to women. She congratulated the delegation for having
   brought representatives from Greenland and the Faroe Islands. She
   noted the "small" number of women represented in the municipalities
   and sought an explanation of this disparity and what measures, if
   any, there were to correct the anomaly.

   On the plan of action, she said it seemed to have failed since only
   a small percentage of women seemed to have met the plan's
   expectations. Another expert wondered why the promotion of women in
   academic circles was so low in Denmark. He also wanted to obtain
   further clarification on the amendment of the citizenship act.

   Before turning the floor over to her colleagues, Ms. ABEL, leader
   of the Danish delegation, explained that she was presently engaged
   in overseeing the development of new measures to further refine
   many of the issues raised by the experts.

   Then Ms. CLAUSEN explained that a family would continue to be
   accepted in her country, even if one of the spouses did not speak
   Danish after the new law came into effect. She confirmed that it
   was true that rules were being introduced requiring new immigrants
   to pass a Danish-language test.

   Women's representation in both Parliament and the municipalities
   was of great concern in the country, Ms. Abel said. An
   investigation was in progress to look further into the matter.

   On the number of women in the diplomatic service, Ms. LEHMANN
   NIELSEN explained that the next few years were expected to witness
   "quite a boost" in the number of women serving their country abroad
   because of newly initiated measures.


   Experts' Comments

   In the next round, several questions were asked about genital
   mutilation and the practice of honour killings in Denmark. Was it
   possible to prosecute parents who went back to their country of
   origin to have genetic mutilation performed on a child?

   The mandate of the Committee and the responsibility of the country
   related to the elimination of discrimination against women, and it
   was important to dwell on discriminatory practices directed against
   them. For that reason, the gender-neutral presentation of the
   material for the Committee was not proper, an expert commented.

   Experts asked what percentage of minority women received higher
   education, and in what fields. Were any enabling conditions created
   for immigrant women to make it easier for them to overcome the
   cultural and linguistic barriers?

   The number of fathers taking parental leave was low, said a
   speaker, asking if the country was going to monitor implementation
   of the new parental leave.

   An expert also suggested that instead of initiating new studies, it
   could be useful to utilize existing knowledge to change the balance
   as far as occupations traditionally occupied by men and women were
   concerned.

   Another expert said that she did not see much effort to change
   traditional stereotypes against women. Efforts to create legal
   opportunities would not be sufficient unless attitudes were
   changed. Progress in the choices of subjects by boys and girls
   remained slow, and stereotypes still persisted in the attitudes of
   teachers. Corrective measures were needed to change mindsets,
   particularly those of teachers. Perhaps some temporary affirmative
   measures were needed.


   Response

   Ms. ABEL said that, under previous regulations, the paternity leave
   was not attractive enough for men to take advantage of it.

   Explaining the new leave scheme, Ms. ANDERSEN said that, under
   previous arrangements, the first two weeks of parental leave had
   been used by about 75 per cent of all fathers. The regulations for
   the following period had been very rigid, and only 3 per cent of
   men took advantage of the 10 weeks offered. Under new, more
   flexible regulations, both parents could extend the paternal leave
   for up to 14 weeks. Women also had longer leaves of up to 32 weeks.
   Parents could now work part-time, fathers and mothers could
   alternate their leaves, and special arrangements could be made with
   employers. The Government was putting a lot of money into the new
   plan, and it was expected to become very popular.

   The question of equal pay was very important to the Government, she
   continued, and it intended to follow it very closely. Two studies
   were being conducted on the issue, and the Government was working
   with private companies to move women to higher-paid jobs. More
   women and men were negotiating higher salaries and wages, and, to
   some degree, that presented new problems along with opportunities,
   for it cost more for the private sector to raise salaries. Many
   strategies were being considered to close the pay gap, but the
   Government needed private companies' cooperation in that regard.
   The Ministry of Employment was currently discussing those issues
   with employment partners.


   Country Response

   On circumcision, Ms. AXELSSON said that female genital mutilation
   or circumcision was punishable by Danish law. Danish law applied to
   violent acts in the same way, regardless of where the acts were
   committed, as long as they were committed by Danish nationals.

   However, in terms of numbers -- female circumcision was not a
   serious problem. Even so, the Government had carried out
   information and awareness campaigns about the number of women going
   abroad for female circumcision, she said.

   Ms. ABEL further explained that every time a new law was passed in
   Denmark, especially a gender-related one, the new law and its
   consequences were looked at from the point of view of the
   consequences that the law would have on both men and women.

   Ms. KOLD said the last 10 years had seen a decline in awareness in
   schools about gender stereotyping and the choices available for
   children with regard to education and job creation. There was need
   to raise the matter to a higher level so that it is made "visible"
   again.


   Experts' Questions

   An expert wanted to know why qualifications for top jobs for women
   seemed to be a problem: the available women candidates appeared to
   possess the right qualifications, and yet the numbers of women
   holding senior positions continued to remain low. She also wondered
   why pensions were lower for women compared to men, and if this
   should not be considered a form of discrimination.

   Another expert noted that the number of questions and concerns
   raised by the experts did not mean and should not be understood by
   members of the Danish delegation to mean that the experts were
   criticizing the work that had been done. Indeed, it was in
   appreciation of the extent of what had been achieved that it was
   possible to seek clarification, she said.


   Country Response

   Ms. AXELSSON provided details regarding the new "teleworking"
   practice, which was being used by the most experienced employees
   several days a week. It was being implemented at a smaller scale
   than expected, but people taking part in the pilot run were highly
   satisfied with the results.

   Ms. ABEL agreed that the lack of women managers "was a mystery" to
   her. In the second half of the year, a new programme would be
   launched to increase their number through participation of the
   private sector and women's organizations.

   Regarding pensions, she said that the question was now being
   debated. Currently, a percentage of workers' pay went towards the
   pension funds. With the lack of equality in pay, the pensions were
   also unequal. Thus, the issue of pensions required attention to the
   issue of equality in pay.

   Ms. APPEL said that not only girls but also boys suffered from
   eating disorders. The issue of media responsibility for creating
   stereotypes in that regard was now under consideration.

   Ms. CLAUSEN said that a father could obtain custody of a child if a
   court decided that it was in the best interests of the child.


   Experts

   Returning to the issue of battered women, an expert noted that, in
   some cases, their residence permit was revoked, and that made it
   extremely difficult for a woman to predict the results of the
   consideration of her case by immigration authorities. He asked for
   further details in that regard.

   The reports contained no information regarding articles 13 to 16 of
   the Convention, an expert pointed out. Under article 16, women
   should have equal family responsibilities with men. At the bottom
   of much of the discrimination that women in Denmark were
   experiencing was an unbalanced share in child-rearing, however. It
   was gratifying to know that fathers were increasingly taking care
   of babies, but she also wanted to know how they participated in
   bringing up older children and shared in housework.

   She was really disturbed by the statement by the Masculine Forum of
   Denmark (contained in the report), which challenged the legitimacy
   of the Convention itself, saying that it found it problematic that
   the Convention aimed to eliminate discrimination only against
   women. It was a source of concern that that group of men did not
   understand the very essence of the Convention. What had been done
   to explain to them what that instrument was about?


   Country Response

   Ms. ABEL confirmed that crisis centres were an important aspect of
   the work programme, but it was not possible to provide any figures
   of cases involved. On the apparent negative attitude shown by an
   NGO towards the Convention, she said it involved only a small group
   of men who probably had not fully understood what the Convention
   was about.

   On what was being done to get men more involved and make the
   household more equal, she said continuous monitoring was being
   carried out, including the introduction of "paternal awards" and
   making available more information intended to bring in more men.






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