The Borneo Post

Women’s gains in politics stagnating, new data shows

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UNITED NATIONS, US: The number of women wielding political power worldwide has stagnated, new data released Wednesday at the United Nations ( UN) showed in fi ndings that UN Women called troubling.

There were 17 women heads of state or government in 2016, down from 19 in 2015, while women won 22.3 of seats in all elections last year, compared with 25 per cent the previous year.

“There is overall stagnation”, UN Women executive director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka told a news conference.

“These are results that are warning bells and there is the persistent missing voice of women where it matters most.”

Mlambo-Ngucka said the new data was ‘quite troubling’ and the failure to achieve progress in women’s representa­tion in politics raised questions about democracy. The global average of women in national parliament­s increased only slightly from 22.6 per cent in 2015 to 23.3 per cent last year, according to the data from the Inter-Parliament­ary Union ( IPU) and UN Women.

“Power is still fi rmly in men’s hands,” said IPU SecretaryG­eneral Martin Chungong, who said the failure to achieve progress was due to a lack of political will. Bulgaria, France, Nicaragua, Sweden and Canada have achieved gender parity in government, with women holding at least half of all ministeria­l posts.

Most women ministers in the world hold the environmen­t, energy or natural resources portfolios, followed closely by social affairs.

Finland and Cape Verde, which have had high rates of women ministers, dropped significan­tly.

Women are also losing ground in Africa, but there were big gains for women in elections in Pacific island-states.

The data was released during the Commission on the Status of Women, a two-week UN conference aimed at taking stock of progress toward gender equality. — AFP

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