Sunday Times (Sri Lanka)

UN women envoys reach new heights but fall short of gender parity

- By Thalif Deen

UNITED NATIONS (IPS) - New York’s diplomatic community has continued to be enriched by a record number of women Permanent Representa­tives (PRUNs)—50 in all, as of October 2 – compared with about 15 to 20 back in the 1980s and early 1990s.

But the history-making number is still short of gender parity, falling far behind the 140 men who are PRUNs in the 193- member General Assembly, the highest policy-making body at the United Nations.

The remaining three women are designated Charge d’Affaires ad interim or acting heads of their respective diplomatic missions – and don’t hold the rank of PRUN.

The 50 PRUNs, who are also designated as Ambassador­s, are members of an exclusive associatio­n called the “Circle of Women Ambassador­s”— even as the circle has steadily kept widening.

The only other glass-shattering UN event took place in September 2014 when six of the 15 members of the UN Security Council– long monopolize­d by men– were women.

“It’s a little strange that it’s taken us this long,” Ambassador Sylvie Lucas of Luxembourg, was quoted as saying, more than five years ago.

UN Secretary- General Antonio Guterres told delegates last week that “no country in the world is on track to attain gender equality by 2030, and women continue to be hampered by discrimina­tory laws, unequal access to opportunit­ies and protection­s, high levels of violence, and damaging norms and attitudes.”

So, gender parity among men and women ambassador­s may be a long way off.

Ambassador Anwarul K. Chowdhury, former Permanent Representa­tive of Bangladesh, and a one- time UN Under- SecretaryG­eneral told IPS: “To me any progress which manifests equality and representa­tion of women’s recognised engagement is welcome.”

The fact that, at the moment, the number of women Permanent Representa­tives to the UN at its headquarte­rs has reached the highest p o i n t ever is a developmen­t worthy of our attention, he said.

“However, we have a long way to go even to reach the numerical equality among 193 Member States”, said Ambassador Chowdhury, the initiator of UN Security Council Resolution ( UNSCR) 1325 as President of the Security Council in March 2000: a resolution that underlined the important role of women in the prevention and resolution of conflicts, and on peace negotiatio­ns and peace-building.

“In this context, I recall the Call to Action by civil society ( which I proudly co- signed) for the world leaders on 25 September 2013 as they converged in New York for the General Assembly’s high level meetings urging them to take action for equality of women’s participat­ion at all decision-making levels in four areas”, he added.

1. Appointmen­t of a woman as the next UN Secretary-General. [reality: none out of 9 Secretarie­sGeneral in 74 years of UN history]

2. Nomination of Women as future Presidents of the General Assembly by the Regional Groups. [reality: only 4 out of 74 Presidents]

3. Election of More Women as Heads of Various UN Governing Bodies, [reality: overwhelmi­ngly underrepre­sented by women]

4. Appointmen­t by Member-states of More Women as Ambassador­s to the UN in New York and Geneva. [reality: overwhelmi­ngly underrepre­sented by women] On all four points, the UN community needs to do much more to call it history- making, said Ambassador Chowdhury.

Kshenuka Senewiratn­e, Sri Lanka’s trailblazi­ng ambassador– her country’s first female permanent representa­tive (PRUN) in over 63 years– told IPS that gender empowermen­t has continued to advance in her home country, even as women outnumber men in many walks of life, and particular­ly in higher education.

She said this is also reflected in the Sri Lankan foreign service where women have dominated over men in open competitiv­e exams.

“And it is possible the same trends continue in many developing nations— even as the UN tries to advance its 2030 Developmen­t Agenda where gender empowermen­t remains one of the priorities.”

But still, “I have yet to hear my colleagues here say that it was a concerted gesture of gender balance that they got posted to New York,” she declared.

Barbara Crossette, a former UN Bureau Chief for the New York Times, told IPS: "My initial thought is that this phenomenon of more powerful women in diplomacy is not unlike women rising on their own in politics and not just by inheriting leadership as widows, daughters or other kin of men, such as Indira Gandhi, Sirimavo Bandaranai­ke, Benazir Bhutto, Chandrika Kumaratung­a or Cristina Fernández de Kirchner."

She pointed out there are now more Angela Merkels, Michelle Bachelets or Elizabeth Warrens, to name only a few.

“Women are also rising in internatio­nal agencies and civil society organisati­ons, gaining expertise in global affairs, geopolitic­s and armed conflict, often in uniform and wearing a peacekeepe­r’s beret”, said Crossette, the senior consulting editor and writer for PassBlue and the United Nations correspond­ent for The Nation.

Asked whether more female diplomats will aid the cause of greater gender equality, she said: “I would say, not necessaril­y, unless the Secretaria­t and missions in the field come down harder on denigrator­s and abusers of women. And, as Louise Frechette (a former UN deputy Secretary-General) told me in an interview, only if member states chose the most competent, outstandin­g women when making nomination­s to fill appointmen­ts in the UN system. They should be the models”, she declared.

Reinforcin­g his arguments further, Ambassador Chowdhury said the political significan­ce of this increase in the number of the women Ambassador­s would be that their joint actions would draw more attention, bearing, of course, in mind that all Ambassador­s to the UN act generally on the basis of instructio­ns from their respective capitals.

“But, I believe, their coalition can join hands to focus on issues particular­ly those directly related to women’s empowermen­t and equality, like Goal 5 of SDG.”

They can also ask for greater engagement of Secretary-General’s leadership in the implementa­tion of UNSCR 1325 on women and peace and security which has made the realisatio­n of women’s equal participat­ion at all decisionma­king levels obligatory on all members of the United Nations and whose 20th anniversar­y is coming up in October 2020, he noted.

Realising gender parity at the senior posts of the UN, both at headquarte­rs and at field levels, could be another area for joint effort.

“Women Ambassador­s could strategise to turn this newly gained numerical enhancemen­t into an effective coalition to attain global objectives of women’s equality and empowermen­t,” he argued.

Apart from this increase in the number of women Ambassador­s, another encouragin­g developmen­t had been that three consecutiv­e women Ambassador­s have been elected as President of the Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) in 2017 –from the Czech Republic, 2018, from St. Vincent and the Grenadines, and 2019 from Norway.

This has improved somewhat ECOSOC’s dismal record of women Presidents, he said.

Since its beginning in 1946 and all the way upto 2003, ECOSOC’s practice of electing only men was challenged by Ambassador Marjatta Rassi of Finland as its first woman President, followed by second woman in 2009 before the successive three women Presidents – a total of 5 out of 74, said Ambassador Chowdhury.

“Given the unacceptab­ly poor women’s representa­tion as General Assembly and ECOSOC Presidents, women Ambassador­s can continue their relentless efforts to improve gender parity in high offices,” he declared.

(The writer can be contacted at thalifdeen@ips.org)

 ??  ?? Circle of Women Ambassador­s: An effective coalition to attain global objectives of women’s equality and empowermen­t
Circle of Women Ambassador­s: An effective coalition to attain global objectives of women’s equality and empowermen­t

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from Sri Lanka