Cape Times

Unrivalled drive for women’s rights

- Alice Lesepen Lesepen is from the Rendille Peoples of Marsabit County in Kenya

NEW YORK: Against the backdrop of unpreceden­ted global efforts for women’s rights and gender equality, the UN Commission on the Status of Women (CSW) is set to begin at the UN’s headquarte­rs located here.

This is the UN’s largest gathering on gender equality and women’s rights, and the single largest forum for UN member states, civil society organisati­ons and other internatio­nal organisati­ons to build consensus and commitment on policy actions on this issue. The forthcomin­g 62nd session of the commission – which gets under way today until Friday – will focus on the priority theme of “Challenges and opportunit­ies in achieving gender equality and the empowermen­t of rural women and girls”.

In the past year, global movements for gender equality – from marches to powerful grassroots organising and viral social media campaigns such as #MeToo and #TimesUp in the US, and their counterpar­ts in other countries have galvanised world attention and captured headlines.

But efforts by rural women and their associatio­ns have persisted away from the spotlight, despite efforts to mobilise, disrupt the status quo and bring about actionable change.

Said UN Women executive director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka: “At the heart of leaving no one behind, is leaving no one out.

“One of the single most impactful contributi­ons to achieving the 2030 Agenda would be to level the inequaliti­es for women and girls in rural areas.

“Significan­t progress for them is progress for the whole agenda, and for the world.”

Rural women and their organisati­ons represent enormous potential. Given their roles in food production, processing and distributi­on, for example, rural women are essential to ensuring global food security.

As primary energy managers in households, they can lead the way in transition­ing to sustainabl­e energy.

And evidence shows that their leadership in the management of natural resources can lead to better outcomes in terms of governance, preservati­on and the regenerati­on of land and forests.

Yet, on almost every measure of developmen­t, rural women fare worse than rural men or urban women due to deep-seated gender inequaliti­es and discrimina­tion.

Gender and geographic inequaliti­es mean rural women and girls are disproport­ionately affected by poverty and have unequal access to land and natural resources, infrastruc­ture and services, decent work and social protection.

They are also more vulnerable to the adverse impact of environmen­tal and climate change.

Multiple barriers trap too many rural women in low-quality, poorly paid work.

The pay gap between rural men and women doing the same work can be as high as 40%.

Agricultur­al work remains a significan­t source of livelihood for rural women. Yet, fewer than 20% of landholder­s worldwide are women, according to the Food and Agricultur­e Organisati­on of the UN Gender and Land Rights Database.

In nearly two-thirds of countries, women are more likely than men to report food insecurity, according to the UN Women report, “Turning Promises into Action”.

Not only are more women hungry, but more women in rural areas suffer poor nutrition that results in anaemia – a leading cause of maternal death.

Infrastruc­ture and technology typically reach rural women last, leaving them ever further behind. In 80% of water-deprived households, women and girls are primarily responsibl­e for the daily water collection.

The 62nd session of the UN Commission on the Status of Women (CSW62) will deliberate on the key issues that significan­tly impact gender equality and the empowermen­t of all rural women and girls.

These will range from how to ensure their adequate living standards with increased access to land and productive assets, decent work, infrastruc­ture and technology, education and health – including their sexual and reproducti­ve health and reproducti­ve rights – and ending all forms of violence and harmful practices.

The forum will be an opportunit­y to provide concrete suggestion­s on how to empower rural women and girls, making the promise of “leaving no one behind” of the 2030 Agenda for Sustainabl­e Developmen­t a reality.

The review theme of this CSW62 is “Women in the media”, bringing timely discussion­s on women’s participat­ion in and access to the media, as well as to informatio­n and communicat­ions technologi­es.

Sexual harassment in the workplace and online, lack of representa­tion, the gender pay gap and many other current issues are expected to come up in the discussion­s.

The global mobilisati­on for gender equality witnessed over the past year is clear as more than 8 000 representa­tives from 1 121 civil society organisati­ons have registered to attend this year’s CSW.

With the 18 official meetings that include ministeria­l round tables, high-level interactiv­e events and expert panels, more than 280 side events hosted by member states and UN agencies, and 440 parallel events hosted by civil society organisati­ons are to take place.

Ahead of CSW62, UN Women together with partners, organised regional consultati­ons with ministers, gender equality authoritie­s and civil society organisati­ons in Africa, Latin America and the Caribbean, Asia-Pacific and Arab states to help build consensus and set priorities towards the commission’s outcome, which will be a set of action-oriented recommenda­tions to accelerate the realisatio­n of gender equality and the empowermen­t of all rural women and girls.

Global forum to focus on priority theme of challenges facing rural women and girls over next fortnight

 ?? Picture: David Ritchie/African News Agency (ANA) ?? ‘GIVE US A BETTER DEAL’: Women picket outside the Western Cape High Court in this file photo last year, while a class action trial takes place inside to have Muslim marriages declared legally valid in South Africa. There’s a global mobilisati­on for the...
Picture: David Ritchie/African News Agency (ANA) ‘GIVE US A BETTER DEAL’: Women picket outside the Western Cape High Court in this file photo last year, while a class action trial takes place inside to have Muslim marriages declared legally valid in South Africa. There’s a global mobilisati­on for the...
 ??  ?? PHUMZILE MLAMBO-NGCUKA
PHUMZILE MLAMBO-NGCUKA

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