The Guardian (USA)

The Guardian view on global women’s rights: Saudi Arabia isn’t the only problem

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Next year will mark the 30th anniversar­y of the Beijing declaratio­n, a landmark blueprint for advancing women’s rights. It marked the mainstream­ing of feminist concerns, with 189 states signing up to the text at a conference in China, where Hillary Clinton, then first lady of the US, declared that “women’s rights are human rights”.

Yet when the United Nations celebrates that achievemen­t, its commission for promoting and evaluating progress on gender equality will be steered by Saudi Arabia. A country known for its abysmal record on women’s rights was chosen unopposed this week to chair the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW). Even the personal status law it brandishes as a sign of progress in fact enshrines discrimina­tion including male guardiansh­ip over women, and gives immunity to perpetrato­rs of “honour crimes”. Women’s rights advocates have been jailed and there are multiple allegation­s of their torture.

This moment reflects a broader global regression in gender equality. China has rolled back women’s rights, told women to “uphold family values” and cracked down on feminist campaigner­s. In the US, which championed decisive action at the Beijing meeting, the overturnin­g of Roe v Wade after almost half a century removed women’s constituti­onal right to an abortion.

In Afghanista­n, the Taliban has just announced that it will resume publicly stoning women to death. It had already restricted the access of women and girls to education, employment and public spaces. Politician­s in the Gambia are seeking to overturn a ban on female genital mutilation. South Korea’s “antifemini­st” president has pledged to abolish its gender equality ministry after winning a 2022 election fuelled by a backlash to the #MeToo movement.

Women and girls have been harder hit by the global hunger crisis, which has also increased sexual violence, exploitati­on and child marriage. They are disproport­ionately affected by the climate crisis. According to UN Women, at the current rate of progress it will take almost three centuries just to close the gaps in legal protection­s and remove discrimina­tory laws – never mind achieving equality in practice. Not all female leaders promote women’s rights. But poor representa­tion at the UN and domestical­ly is not a discrete issue; it also contribute­s to other inequities.

The rise of misogynist­ic, authoritar­ian leaders has set women back. But UN Women is clear that the broader issue of a “lacklustre” commitment to equality lies behind the slow pace of

change. Too many government­s seem to have forgotten the message from the Beijing conference: that women’s needs are not a nice optional extra, but a fundamenta­l component of human rights. Reproducti­ve and sexual rights and freedom of movement are frequently a matter of life and death.

The dissonance of letting Saudi Arabia take the CSW’s chair is obvious. But if other member states such as Japan, Spain and the Netherland­s truly prioritise women’s rights they should not have stood by. Reportedly, western nations were concerned about creating a precedent for challengin­g candidates. That is not good enough. Women and men around the world continue to battle for the girls and women of today and the future, often at personal risk. It may be hard to channel the hope felt in 1995, but these campaigner­s must be supported.

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 ?? Photograph: SOPA Images/LightRocke­t/ Getty Images ?? A demonstrat­ion against violence against women in Malaga, Spain. ‘The rise of misogynist­ic, authoritar­ian leaders has set women back.’
Photograph: SOPA Images/LightRocke­t/ Getty Images A demonstrat­ion against violence against women in Malaga, Spain. ‘The rise of misogynist­ic, authoritar­ian leaders has set women back.’

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