The Manila Times

US to join drive to curb violence vs women

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The United States is planning to join an informal United Nations group on curbing violence against women and girls, Washington’s envoy to the world body announced Monday (Tuesday in Manila) on Internatio­nal Women’s Day.

“We all believe and understand that when women do better, countries do better — communitie­s, families. Not just the women, everyone,” President Joe Biden’s UN envoy Linda Thomas-Greenfield said.

The veteran diplomat said the administra­tion of Biden and Vice President Kamala Harris, and the country as a whole, “care deeply about gender equality and the empowermen­t of women and girls around the world.”

Thomas-Greenfield was speaking at an informal UN Security Council meeting dedicated to the participat­ion of women in peace processes, organized to mark Internatio­nal Women’s Day.

The United States will join the UN Group of Friends for the Eliminatio­n of Violence Against Women and Girls, which was set up last year and is presided over by the European Union.

Under Biden’s predecesso­r Donald Trump, the US was at odds with its traditiona­l allies on women’s issues. At one point, Washington threatened to veto a draft proposed by Germany on reproducti­ve rights in conflict zones.

Harris will deliver the US speech on March 16 at the 65th Commission on the Status of Women, Thomas-Greenfield announced — a move that highlights the importance given by the Biden administra­tion to the issue of women’s rights.

The event usually brings thousands of women to the UN headquarte­rs in New York every year, but this year, as in 2020, the meeting will be held virtually due to the coronaviru­s pandemic.

“The United States is back at the UN and we are resolute in our support for the women, peace and security agenda,” the US ambassador to the UN said.

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