• Saturday, February 11, 2012
  • A program of IPS Inter Press Service supported by the Dutch MDG3 Fund

    RIGHTS: Gender Confab Marked by Political Uncertainties

    By Thalif Deen and Anna Shen* – IPS/TerraViva
    UNITED NATIONS, Mar 12 (IPS) When a two-week meeting on gender empowerment
    concluded at U.N. headquarters Friday, there were several lingering
    questions crying out for answers.

    Were there any commitments to protect the universality of women's
    rights, including sexual and reproductive rights?

    Was there any significant progress on the proposal to set up a separate
    U.N. agency – officially called a gender entity – for women?

    And were there any indications of increased funding for gender-related
    issues, including resources to battle sexual violence?

    The answers were mostly in the realm of political uncertainty, as the U.N.
    Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) assessed the state of women's
    rights, 15 years after the Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing
    approved a wide-ranging plan of action on gender empowerment.

    Naisola Likimani of the pan-African Femnet, an advocacy organisation, said
    she was emotionally exhausted from two weeks of nonstop meetings.

    However, she said, it was good to see that certain issues were now
    understood – such as human trafficking, which was no longer seen as an
    emerging issue. It was now part of a global space that required attention.

    She was pleased the new gender entity had acquired broad support amongst
    governments, civil societies and U.N. agencies but expressed
    disappointment that the process seemed to be stalled.

    "There is foot-dragging and nitpicking about politics. What is
    frustrating is that something so important for resourcing women's
    rights is being treated like a political issue at the U.N.," she
    said.

    "That is very frustrating, especially as there have not been enough
    resources for gender issues," she told TerraViva.

    The speculation that Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon would name a new
    under-secretary-general to head the proposed woman's entity (one of
    the rumoured front runners being former Chilean President Michelle
    Bachelet) never came to pass.

    An international coalition of over 300 non-governmental organisations
    (NGOs), mostly comprising women's rights activists, has been pursuing
    a global campaign for Gender Equality Architecture Reform (GEAR) in the
    U.N. system.

    Charlotte Bunch, founding director of the Centre for Women's Global
    Leadership at Rutgers University and co-facilitator of the GEAR campaign,
    told TerraViva that decisions about gender architecture reform are part of
    the system-wide coherence process in the General Assembly.

    "So the CSW is not really an arena for formal progress in terms of
    the resolution," she said. "However, we do feel there has been a
    lot of progress in terms of gaining more governmental support and
    attention to this issue during the CSW."

    For example, she said, a significant number of countries from all regions
    spoke in support of the new architecture in their speeches.

    The secretary-general himself called on governments to take action to
    create the entity without further delay, she pointed out.

    Bunch said the NGO action – holding up a 'GEAR UP NOW!' sign in
    the balcony during his speech on International Women's Day on Mar.
    3 – was greeted with enthusiastic applause from the audience and a wave
    from the U.N. chief.

    Natalia Cardona of Social Watch, an international network comprising
    coalitions of civil society, said as far as her organisation was
    concerned, the CSW was a success because "it captured the dynamism of
    women's activism at the highest level."

    "There is no other place where women activists can come together and
    discuss women's human rights situation from all over the world,"
    she said.

    However, the space in terms of government accountability and government
    accessibility has dwindled since 1995 when the world conference on women
    was able to make key advances in terms of women's rights as enshrined
    in the Beijing Platform for Action, Cardona told TerraViva.

    There is a sense now in the women's movement that this 15th
    anniversary of the Beijing Conference was not much of an anniversary.

    First, because of the administrative problems associated with hosting so
    many events, and the lack of physical space for women who came here with
    high hopes to access the U.N. and their governments.

    The first blow for women at this CSW came in the form of the rather weak
    negotiated outcome document released by governments.

    This step, on the part of governments, sucked the energy of what women
    felt was a space to advance women's rights.

    "Now, some may say that this weakening of CSW has been happening for
    years. However, this was an opportunity for governments to engage and
    renew their international commitments to women's rights, but instead
    they chose the path of avoidance, and women activists felt their needs had
    no place to be heard and be taken seriously," Candona added.

    Judith Yewoenao, national women's chairperson for Ghana's Health
    Services Workers' Union, was optimistic: "This was not just a
    talk shop. In other words, we don't come and talk and go home and do
    nothing. We will go home and take measures on educating our women and
    enlightening them on women's issues."

    "What I am saying is that most of the issues that came up here have
    to be taken up by governments, because most of them are policy statements
    and if governments are able to put down drastic measures to deal with
    this, we won't have to keep repeating the same messages over and
    over," Yewoenao told TerraViva.

    She said women form the greater part of the population in most countries,
    and if women are well educated on human rights issues and women's
    issues, "then the countries will be a better place to live."

    Dr. Hanifa Mezoui, a former senior U.N. official and a professor from
    Algeria, told TerraViva it has been 15 years since Beijing and there are
    many issues that remain to be explored.

    "What does it take to make it better? It is with great despair that
    we still haven't met the goal. We still don't have women's
    empowerment," she said.

    She said the CSW was very successful but there are huge political
    challenges ahead.

    Bunch said the GEAR campaign's greatest concern now is not whether
    the gender entity will be created – but what will be created.

    "We have been assured it will be done by the end of the current
    session of the General Assembly in September and in time for the summit on
    the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs)," she said.

    But there are still a number of important details to be resolved, she
    added.

    "We have noted repeatedly that in order for the entity to be
    effective – as a driver for the U.N. system on women's rights and
    empowerment – it must have a strong country-level operation," Bunch
    said.

    This requires that it be more than just a coordinating or advisory body
    and that it has the capacity to hold the U.N. system accountable for
    gender mainstreaming as well as to engage in its own programmatic work at
    all levels, Bunch declared.

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