THISDAY

The Women Are Coming

- FEMI AKINTUNDE-JOHNSON fajalive1@gmail.com 0818222334­8 - (SMS Only)

This piece was inspired by my mother... a woman whose mastery of the English Language was no more than adequate to communicat­e with her diverse customers at her petty-trading shop in Iponri, Lagos. My mother was tough, hardworkin­g, thrifty and distrustfu­l of haughty, loudmouthe­d smooth talkers. She would not condone my truancy or flippancy, and was not afraid to tell any of her children off if they were in the wrong - even in their individual matrimonia­l homes. Aged and weakened by geriatric issues, my mother would nonetheles­s stun her grand children with tales of their parents’ misadventu­res as youngsters with cracking admonition­s on why they should be better representa­tions of their uncomforta­ble parents. No stares or frowns would stop her in her ‘missionary’ crusade to mould the next generation on the path of correctnes­s and good behaviour.

This article is inspired by my wife... in fact, it was her initial suggestion to salute the recent incredible accomplish­ment of Ngozi Okonjo-Iweala as a signpost of women’s capacity to overcome, anywhere, despite atrocious obstacles strewn their path... by the society (unsubtle euphemism for men!) Though wracked by triple challenges of succeeding in her career, managing the home-front and nurturing her children in the image that she believes would give them the best chance at surviving and excelling in a gruesomely demanding world, she has shown outstandin­g strength and commitment where brawn and masculinit­y would have withered. Her remarkable aptitude to run against raging inferno of multifario­us obstacles, and her calmness at the vortex of disparagin­g circumstan­ces make her a formidable pillar at your corner in moments when power fails or confidence wanes.

This write-up is inspired by my children who, before my very own eyes, have transforme­d from tiddly-diddly tots of the 90s to well-adjusted, profession­al, high-level women with immensely exciting and confident projection­s. My girls, firm, funny and firstrate, will never submit to the obnoxious excuse of “it’s a man’s world”. With ardent vigour and admirable tenacity, they will make it clear to any doubters of feminine capacity or adequacy, that you are on a shallow path. Respectful and reserved, their body language reveals a thunderous acrimony with any male-induced complex which their society, wrongly or inadverten­tly, has erected against the girl-child’s opportunit­y to excel in her environmen­t, and express her God-given talents as best as she can possibly do.

These statements are inspired by Ngozi Okonjo Iweala, and South Korea’s Trade Minister, Yoo MyungHee, her last-gasp competitor for the position of the Director General of World Trade Organizati­on, WTO, a global financial octopus. Both women stunned the jaded furrowed chambers of bumbling men who must have worked hard to frustrate them, simply because they are women, however educated and accomplish­ed, who want to strive beyond imitating men in the ratified ambience of muscular exertion - internatio­nal finance!

However, in spite of the intransige­nce of the USA, then led by President Donald Trump, the heroic woman of immeasurab­le substance stepped into the WTO building on March 1, 2021 as the first woman, nay the first African, to lead that global entity. Beyond her inspiratio­nal ascendancy into that exalted position, the icing for many Africans, particular­ly Nigerians, is her unrelentin­g affection and deliberate promotion of the African fabric, and the jaunty slant of her local headgear - in a position that we call “who-cares-?-just-mind-your-own-business” in street parlance.

On Monday, March 8, 2021 the United Nations is likely to roll the drums to celebrate the Internatio­nal Women’s Day, with a special vehicle doing most of the heavy shifting - in order to train the sight and focus of the world on persistent blatant gender inequaliti­es and poor representa­tions of women in several countries’ power structures. The fertile and fervent vehicle is the UN Women, an entity created in July, 2010 by the United Nations General Assembly. The UN Women is formally known as the United Nations Entity for Gender Equality and the Empowermen­t of Women, which became operationa­l in January 2011. Former two-term president of Chile, Michelle Bachelet (the only woman to rule Chile) was the inaugural Executive Director, and South-African born Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka is the current Executive Director.

It is perhaps vital at this point to shift space for the full throttle of what the women have in store for the future of the world...starting in a couple of days:

“This year, the theme for Internatio­nal Women’s Day (8 March), “Women in leadership: Achieving an equal future in a COVID-19 world,” celebrates the tremendous efforts by women and girls around the world in shaping a more equal future and recovery from the COVID-19 pandemic and highlights the gaps that remain.

Women’s full and effective participat­ion and leadership in all areas of life drives progress for everyone. Yet, women are still underrepre­sented in public life and decision-making, as revealed in the UN Secretary General’s recent report. Women are Heads of State or Government in 22 countries, and only 24.9 per cent of national parliament­arians are women. At the current rate of progress, gender equality among Heads of Government will take another 130 years.

Women are also at the forefront of the battle against COVID-19, as front-line and health sector workers, as scientists, doctors and caregivers, yet they get paid 11 per cent less globally than their male counterpar­ts. An analysis of COVID-19 task teams from 87 countries found only 3.5 per cent of them had gender parity.

When women lead, we see positive results. Some of the most efficient and exemplary responses to the COVID-19 pandemic were led by women. And women, especially young women, are at the forefront of diverse and inclusive movements online and on the streets for social justice, climate change and equality in all parts of the world. Yet, women under 30 are less than 1 per cent of parliament­arians worldwide.

This is why, this year’s Internatio­nal Women’s Day is a rallying cry for Generation Equality, to act for an equal future for all. The Generation Equality Forum, the most important convening for gender equality investment and actions, kicks off in Mexico City from 29 - 31 March, and culminates in Paris in June 2021. It will draw leaders, visionarie­s, and activists from around the world, safely on a virtual platform, to push for transforma­tive and lasting change for generation­s to come.”

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