NewsDay (Zimbabwe)

More women get posts in UN’s CRPD committee

- BY VANESSA GONYE Follow Vanessa on Twitter @vanessa_gonye

WOMEN now make up the majority of the 18-member United Nations committee that monitors implementa­tion of the Convention on the Rights of Persons with Disabiliti­es, after five women were elected onto the body.

The developmen­t means gender parity has been achieved for the first time on the committee — a result that answers the call of Sightsaver­s Equal World campaign for the committee to better represent the people it exists to serve.

Of the 18 members, nine positions are up for election every two years.

Sightsaver­s campaigned for better representa­tion of women in the 2018 election, which saw the number of women on the committee grow from just one to six.

In 2020, campaign supporters also called for greater diversity of members, including people with different types of impairment and people from low- and middle-income countries.

Other positive results of the vote include the re-election of Robert Martin from New Zealand, who is the first member of the committee with an intellectu­al disability, and the election of a member from Morocco, a lower-middle income country.

The committee election is not yet complete; as the voting is conducted in rounds and there is still a third round to be held to decide who will be elected to the final positions on the committee.

However, of the 18 members of the committee, it is now confirmed that at least 11 will be women.

Tessa Murphy, Sightsaver­s’ campaign manager, said: “Our campaign supporters from across the globe played a leading role in securing this long-awaited change with nearly 4 000 campaigner­s sending messages to their UN representa­tives to uphold disability rights, and call for gender equality and diversity on the CRPD committee.”

“Thanks to their support we now have a committee that better reflects the very different challenges faced by women and men with disabiliti­es. While we are happy to see Sir Robert Martin re-elected, there is still a need for better representa­tion of impairment, and more members from low-income countries. But we are thrilled to have finally reached the goal of gender parity on the committee,” she said.

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