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International Women’s Day: UN seeks human rights for women

11 Mar 2014, 11:44 am Print

International Women’s Day: UN seeks human rights for women
New York, Mar 8 (JEN): On the eve of International Women’s Day, the United Nations has launched the “He for She” campaign urging men to stand up for the rights of their mothers, sisters and daughters, while top UN officials stressed that human rights for girls and women are not a dream but a duty of all.

“Throughout the world, discrimination against women and girls is rampant, and in some cases getting worse. But we also know equality for women is progress for all,” Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon said, quoting the theme of this year’s observation.
 
He also appealed to men and boys of the world: join us, “Where men and women have equal rights, societies prosper.”
 
With this in mind, the UN at a special Headquarters event on Friday launched the “He for She” campaign urging men and boys to take a stand. Friday’s launch features video clips of prominent men urging support for gender equality, including Ban, Nobel Laureate Desmond Tutu and actor Antonio Banderas.
 
“I commend those of you [men and boys] who have spoken out and stand with women and girls, as you know women hold half of the sky. We call on all men also, stand up and hold up half of their part of the sky,” said Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, Under-Secretary-General and Executive Director of UN Women told participants after jokingly telling them, “This is a celebration, so don’t look so serious.”
 
“I think that it is important that women celebrate themselves, but also it is important that they don’t only speak to each other, preach to the converted, that women go out there and we win more allies for our struggle,” Mlambo-Ngcuka stressed in a new interview with UN News Services.
 
Next year will mark 20th anniversary of the landmark World Conference on Women. The Beijing Declaration and the Platform for Action, adopted unanimously by 189 countries, is considered the key global policy document on gender equality, addressing critical areas such as women and poverty, violence against women and the human rights of women.
 
Former United States Secretary of State Hillary Clinton, who also participated in Friday’s event, played an instrumental role in Beijing, where she uttered the famous quote, “human rights are women’s rights and women’s rights are human rights, once and for all.”
 
On Friday, in a play, she said: “Just as women’s rights are human rights, women’s progress is human progress.” She added that despite the achievements, no country in the world has achieved full participation of women in society, and this remains the “great unfinished business of the 21th century.”
 
The next year will also be crucial as it marks the target date for the achievement of the global anti-poverty targets known as the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs), which contain specific benchmarks for gender equality.
 
Countries are also working toward the adoption of global development agenda beyond 2015.
 
“As we begin crafting a new development agenda for the post-2015 era, we can celebrate the world’s recognition that gender equality and women’s empowerment must be at the heart of sustainable development,” said John Ashe, President of this year’s General Assembly.
 
He added that women and girls take their rightful places in the new development paradigm not only because it is critical for development, “but because equality is their right”, and stressed the importance of addressing root causes of gender inequality.
 
Ashe also highlighted the importance of ensuring women’s right to sexual and reproductive health.
 
Ban, who returned to New York earlier on Friday from Sierra Leone, met on Thursday in London with Fahma Mohammad, part of the Integrate Bristol campaign against female genital mutilation (FGM) supported by The Guardian newspaper. Ban had pledged to support her efforts.
 
“Women’s rights, women’s empowerment, and gender equality are essential components of this conversation – including reproductive rights and ending violence against women,” Ban said.
 
In his speech, the Secretary-General also noted that gender equality and women’s empowerment have been a top priority for him since taking office in 2007.
 
On Friday, the top humanitarian official of the United Nations [Valerie Amos], our top development official [Helen Clark], the head of peacebuilding support and the head of peacekeeping support [Ameera Haq], the heads of human rights [Navi Pillay], disarmament [Angela Kane], the Joint OPCW-UN Mission on the destruction of Syria’s chemical weapons [Sigrid Kaag], and the World Food Programme [Ertharin Cousin] – not to mention my own Chief of Staff [Susana Malcorra] – are all women,” Ban said.
 
Andrea Nunez, Vice President of the World YWCA Board, also participated in Friday’s discussion.
 
The event was held in the UN’s Trusteeship Council which features a carving of a woman with outstretched arms letting a bird free meant to symbolize an unlimited flight to greater heights.
 
UN Photo/Evan Schneider