World leaders must recommit to gender equality

By Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka
0 Comment(s)Print E-mail China.org.cn, March 8, 2015
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Maternal mortality has fallen by 45 percent; but the goal for 2015 was 75 percent. There are still 140 million women with no access to modern family planning: the goal for 2015 was universal coverage.

More girls are starting school and more are completing their education; countries have largely closed the "gender gap" in primary education. Many more girls are entering secondary school too, but there is a wide gap between girls' and boys' attainments.

More women are working: Twenty years ago, 40 percent of women were in waged and salaried employment. Today that proportion has grown to some 50 percent. But at this rate, it would take more than 80 years to achieve gender parity in employment, and more than 75 years to reach equal pay.

This year marks a great opportunity for the world's leaders, and a great challenge. When they meet at the United Nations in New York in September, they will have the opportunity to revisit and re-commit to the goals of Beijing.

Today, we call on those leaders to join women in a great partnership for human rights, peace and development. We call on them to show an example in their own lives of how equality benefits everyone: man, woman and child. And we call on them to lead and invest in change at a national level to address the gender equality gaps that we know still persist.

We must have an end point in sight. Our aim is substantial action now, urgently frontloaded for the first five years, and equality before 2030. There is an urgent need to change the current trajectories. The poor representation of women in political and economic decision-making poses a threat to women's empowerment and gender equality that men can and must be part of addressing.

If the world's leaders join the world's women this September; if they genuinely step up their action for equality, building on the foundation laid in the last 20 years; if they can make the necessary investments, build partnerships with business and civil society, and hold themselves accountable for results, it could be sooner.

Women will get to equality in the end. The only question is, why should we wait? So we're celebrating today, International Women's Day; confident in the expectation that we will have still more to celebrate next year, and the years to come.

The writer is UN Women executive director.

Opinion articles reflect the views of their authors, not necessarily those of China.org.cn.

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