The Reporter (Lansdale, PA)

Ivanka Trump eyes laws, customs holding back African women

- By Catherine Lucey

ADDIS ABABA, ETHIOPIA >> Visiting Africa to promote female economic developmen­t, Ivanka Trump on Monday sought to spotlight laws and customs that hold women on the continent back, from restrictio­ns on property ownership to gender-based violence.

The president’s daughter and senior adviser, on a four-day trip to promote a White House global women’s project, spoke about roadblocks for women during a policy discussion with Ethiopia’s president and after signing a joint statement with the African Union Commission.

“We can and we must address these barriers to women’s equality and countries’ prosperity,” Trump said during a panel discussion at a meeting of the U.N. Economic Commission for Africa. She pointed to the limited number of female landowners on the continent and said some countries have laws allowing men to block their wives from working.

In the agreement, the United States and the African Union Commission pledged to help empower women and to fight problems such as child marriage, human traffickin­g and sexual abuse. She signed it along with Kwesi Quartey, the commission’s deputy chairman.

Trump highlighte­d the “collective goal” to eliminate gender-based violence and stressed the shared focus on improving access to education and business opportunit­ies.

On her second day in Ethiopia, Trump delivered her message on gender equity in a country long considered a patriarcha­l society, where women and girls struggle with access to jobs and education. Female genital mutilation continues in some areas, although the government has outlawed the practice.

Ethiopia has pursued sweeping political and economic reforms under Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed. Last year, lawmakers approved a cabinet with women making up a record 50 percent of ministers and elected President Sahle-Work Zewde, the first woman to hold the largely ceremonial post.

Trump met with both leaders Monday, sitting with Zewde in a formal room at the presidenti­al palace.

 ?? JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS ?? White House senior adviser Ivanka Trump, left, shakes hands with Kwesi Quartey, Deputy Chairperso­n of the African Union Commission (AUC), Monday after they met and signed a statement together at the AUC headquarte­rs in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.
JACQUELYN MARTIN — THE ASSOCIATED PRESS White House senior adviser Ivanka Trump, left, shakes hands with Kwesi Quartey, Deputy Chairperso­n of the African Union Commission (AUC), Monday after they met and signed a statement together at the AUC headquarte­rs in Addis Ababa, Ethiopia.

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