|
Greater efforts needed to
achieve gender balance within UN system – Migiro
14 November 2007 – Deputy Secretary-General
Asha-Rose Migiro today called for greater efforts to achieve gender
balance within the United Nations system, stating that statistics
show an “unacceptable” lack of progress in this area
despite the measures taken so far.
While the UN has proclaimed the equal rights of men and women, and
the General Assembly has called for 50-50 gender balance in the
world body’s staff in numerous resolutions over the years,
gender parity has yet to become a reality.
“Our own statistics showed an unacceptable lack of progress
in achieving gender balance among United Nations staff,” Ms.
Migiro said in a message to the expert group meeting on measures
to accelerate the improvement in the status of women in the UN system.
She noted that, for the past eight years, the share of female Secretariat
staff in professional and higher categories increased by an average
of only 0.35 per cent per year. Between 2004 and 2006, the proportion
of women in most professional grades actually decreased.
Also during the same period, there was close to a 20 per cent rise
in the proportion of women leaving the Organization voluntarily
before retirement age.
“Simple projections show that at the current glacial pace,
we would achieve gender balance at the USG [Under-Secretary-General]
level in 2080, and, even more alarmingly, at the P-5 level in 2120.”
In addition, if UN managers today were judged on their performance
on gender, “few of them would get a passing grade.”
She stressed the need for managers at all levels to be bold and
creative in their efforts to reach gender parity throughout the
UN system, including in recruiting and retaining qualified women.
Ms. Migiro also suggested exploring the kind of temporary special
measures that have been used by some Member States to reach legislated
gender targets. “It is my firm conviction that without temporary
special measures, tradition, whatever its manifestation, cannot
be overcome,” she stated.
Another area that the Deputy Secretary-General feels requires greater
efforts within the Organization is regarding rule of law. “Despite
our strengths, we have struggled to ensure strategic coherence and
coordination in our engagement in rule of law,” Ms. Migiro
told a round-table discussion on cooperation between the UN and
rule of law assistance providers, held yesterday.
To address that issue, Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon has established
the Rule of Law Coordination and Resource Group, which Ms. Migiro
chairs, and the Rule of Law Unit. The Unit supports the Group in
system-wide coordination, guidance and development of best practices,
and fostering effective partnerships with external actors.
“With these new arrangements, we have set firmly down a path
towards shared strategic and policy direction, coordination and
quality-control,” she said, stressing that for the UN, the
rule of law is fundamental to achieving long-lasting peace and security,
effective protection of human rights, economic progress and sustainable
development.
From: http://www.un.org/apps/news/story.asp?NewsID=24664&Cr=UN&Cr1
|