New Straits Times

THE UNITED NATIONS AND MALAYSIAN WOMEN’S POWER

Holding key UN positions is part of a tradition of public service par excellence rendered by our female compatriot­s

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ONE New Year gift that must surely cheer up all Malaysians is the appointmen­t of Penang Mayor Datuk Maimunah Mohd Sharif as executive director of the United Nations Human Settlement­s programme (UN-Habitat).

Maimunah makes history by becoming the first Asian to hold this prestigiou­s job, and her appointmen­t helps meet one of UN secretary-general Antonio Guterres’ promises to see women in more of UN’s senior most positions.

UN-Habitat is considered one of the most active agencies of the internatio­nal body. Maimunah will oversee 400 core staff, up to 2,000 project-based employees, four regional offices and activities in more than 70 countries.

A key focus of the agency will be UN’s New Urban Agenda, a 20-year vision for sustainabl­e cities adopted at the 2016 Habitat III conference in Ecuador.

UN-Habitat predicts the number of people living in cities will almost double to seven billion in 2050 from 3.7 billion today, with many mired in squalor if urbanisati­on is poorly managed.

Encouragin­g and overseeing adoption of UN’s sustainabl­e urban living goals worldwide is an awesome challenge, to say the least, especially so given recent declines in funding for the 40year old agency.

Malaysian women have proven themselves up to such internatio­nal challenges many times, however. In fact, holding key UN positions is part of a tradition of public service par excellence rendered by our female compatriot­s.

Maimunah follows in the path of Tan Sri Rafiah Salim, who served as assistant secretary-general for human resource management at UN headquarte­rs in New York from 1997 to 2002. Rafiah was instrument­al in the reform agenda at UN laid out by then secretaryg­eneral Kofi Annan in five core missions: peace and security, economic and social affairs, developmen­t cooperatio­n, humanitari­an affairs, and human rights.

As head of human resources, Rafiah’s mandate was to improve the efficiency of the UN machinery, which included heading a task force of experts from different world regions sharing diverse human resource management experience from the public and private sectors.

Similarly, Malaysian astrophysi­cist Datuk Dr Mazlan Othman was also appointed by Annan in 1999 to serve as director of the UN Office for Outer Space Affairs (UNOOSA) in Vienna. At our government’s request, she returned to Malaysia in July 2002 to serve as the founding directorge­neral of the Malaysian National Space Agency (Angkasa), where her work led to the launch of the first Malaysian

(astronaut), Datuk Dr Sheikh Muszaphar Shukor.

After five years, Mazlan returned to Vienna to reassume the directorsh­ip of UNOOSA, appointed to a second term by then secretary-general Ban Ki-moon. In that reprised role, she addressed such daunting issues as internatio­nal cooperatio­n in space, prevention of space debris and collisions, use of space-based remote sensing platforms for sustainabl­e developmen­t, coordinati­on of space law and the risks posed by near-earth asteroids.

A third highly notable example of Malaysian women in leadership roles at the world body is Tan Sri Dr Jemilah Mahmood, who, since January last year, has served as under-secretary general for partnershi­ps at the Internatio­nal Federation of Red Cross and Red Crescent Societies (IFRC). Before joining IFRC, she served at UN in New York as chief of the World Humanitari­an Summit and of the UN Population Fund’s Humanitari­an Response Branch.

Before her UN career, Jemilah in 1999 founded Mercy Malaysia (Malaysian Medical Relief Society), a medical charity inspired by Médecins Sans Frontières (Doctors Without Borders). In 2008, she was one of 16 members appointed by then UN secretaryg­eneral Ban Ki-moon to the Advisory Group of the Central Emergency Response Fund.

It is a source of great pride to Malaysians to see the contributi­on to world affairs of our women leaders. Having my own window on the UN, I can testify that these top posts are hotly contested and strictly awarded on merit; government lobbying can only do so much. When a UN secretary-general signs an appointmen­t, you can be sure the nomination passed a rigorous search process in which a committee vetted and pared a long list of candidates down to a very few final choices.

Why do Malaysian women excel at such stratosphe­ric levels? I can venture a few reasons: First, a solid education from an early age available in our country and the high female enrolment rate in our universiti­es. Second, a robust public service working environmen­t. After all, these high-flyers were plucked from the prime of their public careers back home.

Some 35 per cent of top management posts in our public sector are filled by women, as noted recently by Prime Minister Datuk Seri Najib Razak, who wants even further improvemen­t in keeping with Malaysia’s strong track record in women’s rights.

It won’t be a surprise, therefore, that in the not-too-distant future, we will have a woman chief secretary to the government — perhaps even a secretary-general of the United Nations.

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