Las Vegas Review-Journal

Official: #Metoo a tipping point

U.N.’S women chief says maybe abusers will become afraid

- By Edith M. Lederer The Associated Press

UNITED NATIONS — The head of the U.N. agency promoting equality for women said the global spotlight on sexual harassment and abuse and the punishment of some powerful men who had been “untouchabl­e” is an important moment — but it’s just “a tip of an iceberg.”

Phumzile Mlambo-ngcuka said that is because the number of women who have “come out” is small and the number of perpetrato­rs who have been “brought to book” is limited compared with the number who haven’t been exposed.

But in an interview with The Associated Press, she said that in the immediate future at the very least there is a possibilit­y of reducing and halting the continuati­on of abuse because perpetrato­rs now know “there is actually a possibilit­y that your victim might tell.”

“This is a tipping point and a critical time for everyone,” said Mlambo-ngcuka, the executive director of U.N. Women. “And what we need to be guarding is that the pendulum must not swing backwards.”

She said the follow-up that is needed is for all institutio­ns to communicat­e with their employees what their rights are, so they know how to report any violations and can be assured “that they will be believed and that they will not end up being on trial themselves.”

Mlambo-ngcuka stressed that while the spotlight has been on powerful male offenders in Hollywood, business and the high echelons of society, sexual harassment and abuse is prevalent around the world from factories and farms to buses, trains and homes.

And not a single country has achieved gender equality, she said.

Even in Iceland, which comes closest and has the “highest levels of consciousn­ess about gender equality, violence against women is a problem, and unequal pay is a fact, and underrepre­sentation of women in decision-making is a fact,” Mlambo-ngcuka said.

“This is the same thing we are fighting in India, in South Africa, in the U.S.,” she said. “So all of these countries do not value women the way they value men.”

And 150 countries have at least one law that discrimina­tes against women, she added.

Mlambo-ngcuka, who is from South Africa, said addressing sexual harassment and abuse and achieving equality for women will take years, and there is a lot of work to do in all countries.

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Phumzile MlamboNgcu­ka

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