Imperial Valley Press

UN commission urges equality for women in decision-making

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UNITED NATIONS ( AP) — The U.N.’s premiere global body fighting for gender equality called for a sharp increase of women in global decision-making in a hotly debated final document adopted Friday night that saw continuing pushback against women’s rights and a refusal to address issues of gender identity.

The Commission on the Status of Women rea rmed the blueprint to achieve gender equality adopted 25 years ago at the Beijing women’s conference and shone a spotlight on several major issues today, including the imbalance of power between men and women in public life and the growing impact of violence against women and girls in the digital world.

Diplomats were negotiatin­g until almost the last minute over language on women human rights defenders, gender-based violence, and earlier on reproducti­ve and sexual health and rights. Some Western nations sought unsuccessf­ully to get the commission to recognize gender non-conforming and transgende­r women. The closest they got was a reference to women and girls “who experience multiple and intersecti­ng forms of discrimina­tion” and face “diverse situations and conditions.”

The European Union said it would have liked to see “more ambitious language” in the 23page document, stressing that “the systematic attempts by some delegation­s to derail the process and question internatio­nal commitment­s and obligation­s on gender equality show that the pushback against women’s rights continue.”

Shannon Kowalski, director of advocacy and policy for The Internatio­nal Women’s Health Coalition, said at a briefing earlier Friday that this year “Russia has been very vocal and on the front lines” in pushing “for language that is often regressing and that seeks to deny women and girls ... their rights.” The Holy See often joined their positions, and Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Cuba were also vocal opponents on many issues, she said, while China opposed any reference to women human rights defenders.

“Russia played an exceptiona­lly disruptive role in the negotiatio­ns,” an EU diplomat said. “Today’s low common denominato­r result demonstrat­es that a pushback against women’s rights continues at the U.N., and that Russia is doing all it can to undermine progress on the issue.” The diplomat spoke on condition of anonymity because of the sensitivit­y of private discussion­s.

The “Agreed Conclusion­s” were negotiated by the 193 U.N. member nations and adopted by consensus by the commission’s 45 members at the end of a two-week meeting. The U.N. women’s agency said more than 25,000 members of civil society registered to participat­e in the partly in-person but mainly virtual meeting that saw 200 side events led by member states and more than 700 events by civil society representa­tives.

After Ambassador Mher Margaryan, the commission chair, banged the gavel signifying consensus, about two dozen countries spoke.

Saudi Arabia stressed that any reference to gender “means women and men” and to marriage as “between women and men.” China said it would not join consensus on the role of women human rights defenders.

In the document, the commission supports the important role of civil society in promoting and protecting the human rights and freedoms of all women, “including women human rights defenders.”

U.N. Women Executive Director Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka said areas in the outcome document “do not please everybody,” and the conclusion­s could have been “more ambitious” and the recommenda­tions “even bolder and decisive.”

She urged member states to use the recommenda­tions “as a building block and to outperform what is contained in these Agreed Conclusion­s.” She said next week’s mainly virtual Gender Equality Forum in Mexico

City, another follow-up to the 1995 Beijing conference, “will take forward what we have learned from the discussion­s of this commission and look at how we take concrete actions.”

Mlambo- Ngcuka said the conclusion­s “contribute to important advances” on women’s participat­ion in public life, the main focus of the meeting along with tackling violence against women which increased during last year’s COVID-19 pandemic.

The commission recognized that despite some progress women have a long road to reach equality with men in elections or appointmen­ts to decision-making bodies and administra­tive posts, she said. And it recognized that temporary special measures, including quotas, substantia­lly contribute to increasing women’s representa­tion in national and local legislatur­es, and called on all government­s to set specific targets and timelines to achieve the goal of 50/50 gender balance in elected positions.

On violence against women in the digital world, Mlambo-Ngcuka said the commission noted

the lack of preventive measures and remedies. She said member states should take action to encourage women’s digital participat­ion and protect them, including from cyberstalk­ing and cyberbully­ing.

The Beijing declaratio­n and platform approved by 189 countries in 1995 called for bold action in 12 areas to achieve gender equality, including combating poverty and gender-based violence, ensuring all girls get an education and putting women at top levels of business and government, as well as at peacemakin­g tables.

It also said, for the first time in a U.N. document, that women’s human rights include the right to control and decide “on matters relating to their sexuality, including their sexual and reproducti­ve health, free of discrimina­tion, coercion and violence.”

In Friday’s outcome document, the commission urges government­s at all levels to “ensure universal access to sexual and reproducti­ve health and reproducti­ve rights.”

It also urges government­s to provide informatio­n on sexual and reproducti­ve health and HIV prevention, gender equality and women’s empowermen­t” to adolescent girls and boys and young women and men, “with appropriat­e direction and guidance from parents and legal guardians.”

On a positive note, the Internatio­nal Women’s Health Coalition’s Kowalski said the commission’s meeting saw “very strong leadership” from a number of Latin American and Pacific island countries and the “really strong and vital return of the United States as a leader and defender of sexual and reproducti­ve health and rights, gender equality and women’s rights more broadly.”

A highlight of the meeting was the virtual appearance by U.S. Vice President Kamala Harris, who told the commission “the status of women is the status of democracy” and President Joe Biden’s administra­tion will work to improve both.

 ?? AP PHOTO/MARY ALTAFFER ?? In this 2018 file photo, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, United Nations Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director of U.N. Women, speaks during an interview with The Associated Press, in New York.
AP PHOTO/MARY ALTAFFER In this 2018 file photo, Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, United Nations Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director of U.N. Women, speaks during an interview with The Associated Press, in New York.

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