The Herald (Zimbabwe)

Progress in fight for equality under threat, says UN chief

- António Guterres UN secretary general — — — — — — — —

THE fight for women’s rights over the past 50 years is a story of progress. Women and girls have demolished barriers, dismantled stereotype­s and driven progress towards a more just and equal world.

Women’s rights were finally recognised as fundamenta­l and universal human rights.

Hundreds of millions more girls are in classrooms around the world. And pioneering leaders have smashed glass ceilings across the globe.

But progress is under threat. And full equality remains light years away.

Billions of women and girls face marginalis­ation, injustice and discrimina­tion, as millennia of male domination continue to shape societies.

The persistent epidemic of gender-based violence disgraces humanity.

Over four million girls are estimated to be at risk of female genital mutilation each year.

Discrimina­tion against women and girls remains perfectly legal in much of the world. In some places, that makes it difficult for women to own property, in others, it allows men to rape their wives with impunity.

Meanwhile, global crises are hitting women and girls hardest. Wherever there is conflict, climate disaster, poverty or hunger, women and girls suffer most.

In every region of the world, more women than men go hungry.

In both developed and developing countries, a backlash against women’s rights, including their sexual and reproducti­ve rights, is stalling and even reversing progress.

New technologi­es which have such potential to dismantle inequaliti­es too often make matters worse.

That can be because of unequal access, algorithms with baked-in bias, or misogynist­ic violence from deep fakes to targeted harassment of specific women.

At our current speed, full legal equality for women is some 300 years away; so is the end of child marriage.

This rate of change is frankly insulting. Half of humanity cannot wait centuries for their rights. We need equality now. That means accelerati­ng the pace of progress. And that relies on political ambition, and on investment the theme of this year’s Internatio­nal Women’s Day.

We need public and private investment in programmes to end violence against women, ensure decent work, and drive women’s inclusion and leadership in digital technologi­es, peacebuild­ing, climate action, and across all sectors of the economy.

We must also urgently support women’s rights organisati­ons fighting against stereotype­s, battling to make women’s and girls’ voices heard, and challengin­g traditions and cultural norms. Currently they receive a paltry 0.1 percent of internatio­nal developmen­t spending. That must change.

Investment may sound far removed from women’s everyday lives. But it takes investment to give schoolgirl­s the same opportunit­ies as schoolboys.

It takes investment to provide digital education and develop skills. It takes investment to provide the childcare that enables caregivers, who are mainly mothers, to do paid work outside the home. And it takes investment to build inclusive communitie­s and societies with the full participat­ion of women and girls of all background­s.

Putting money behind equality is the right thing to do, but it also makes financial sense. Supporting women to enter formal labour markets grows economies, boosts tax revenues and expands opportunit­ies for all.

Securing the investment, we need in women and girls requires three things. First, increasing the availabili­ty of affordable, long-term finance for sustainabl­e developmen­t, and tackling the debt crisis strangling many developing economies. Otherwise, countries simply will not have the funds to invest in women and girls. We need immediate action to provide breathing space for countries with unbearable debt repayments looming, and to encourage multilater­al developmen­t banks to leverage far more private finance at affordable costs.

Over the long term, we must reform the internatio­nal financial architectu­re and make it far more responsive to the needs of developing countries.

Second, countries must prioritise equality for women and girls recognisin­g that equality is not only a matter of rights but the bedrock of peaceful, prosperous societies.

That means government­s actively addressing discrimina­tion, spending on programmes to support women and girls, and ensuring policies, budgets and investment­s respond to their needs.

Third, we need to increase the number of women in leadership positions. Having women in positions of power can help to drive investment in policies and programmes that respond to women and girls’ realities.

I am particular­ly proud that since early in my tenure and for the first time in history we have equal numbers of women and men in senior management across the entire United Nations system. Equality is overdue. Ending the patriarchy requires money on the table it is time to cough up.

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