|
Time for
a Woman at the UN
By Jessica Neuwirth
September 12, 2006 - (Alternet) Kofi
Annan says the world is ready for a female secretary general. So
why are there only men on the short list of candidates to succeed
him?
When the 61st session of the United
Nations General Assembly opens this week, its new president, Sheikha
Haya Rashed Al Khalifa, will have her hands full. The Bahrain lawyer
and first woman in decades to serve as president of the General
Assembly has said that reform is vital as is agreement on a "comprehensive
and practical strategy" to fight terrorism. Her first order
of business may well involve the decision of who will replace UN
Secretary General Kofi Annan, whose second and last term is up at
the end of the year.
Despite Sheikha Haya's election, the
United Nations still misses the point grasped in such countries
as Germany, Jamaica, Liberia, Chile, and New Zealand: that women,
too, can serve as leaders at the highest level. In the UN system,
the 15-member Security Council vastly overpowers Sheikha Haya's
General Assembly -- although some members have demanded that the
GA, which must approve the SC's recommendation for UN chief, take
a more active role in choosing Annan's successor.
No woman has served as secretary general
in the 61 years since the United Nations was founded, and, to date,
none has emerged as a leading candidate in consultations in advance
of this year's choice. And despite the body's stated goal of achieving
gender parity within the system by the year 2000, women remain grossly
underrepresented: Only 16 percent of undersecretaries general are
women. More than a decade after the UN Fourth World Conference on
Women in Beijing called for "mechanisms to nominate women candidates
for appointment to senior posts in the United Nations," no
such mechanism is in place for the most senior post.
The selection process -- cloaked in
secrecy and devoid of formal procedure -- hardly serves any notion
of transparency or democracy. To be successful a candidate must
avoid a veto by any of the five permanent members of the Security
Council: China, France, Russia, Britain, and the United States.
Who the candidates are, often a subject of intrigue and speculation
by the media, can be as much a mystery as how they are considered
-- a process that keeps many qualified candidates, and especially
qualified women, from getting due deliberation.
Women qualified for the post abound.
Among those serving at the level of undersecretary general or at
the highest level of national government are UN High Commissioner
for Human Rights Louise Arbour, Prime Minister Helen Clark of New
Zealand, President Tarja Halonen of Finland, and President Vaira
Vike-Freiberga of Latvia (who has expressed interest in the secretary
general post). After serving as prime minister of Norway, Gro Harlem
Brundtland held the post of director general of the World Health
Organization. Currently a judge on the International Criminal Court,
Navanethem Pillay served previously for four years as president
of the UN Rwanda Tribunal.
It is understood that a secretary general
should not be the national of any permanent member of the Security
Council and that the post is subject to regional rotation.The general
feeling is that it is now Asia's "turn," but some call
for an Eastern European choice. Although no woman has ever held
the post, the idea of a woman's "turn" has yet to take
hold.
There are many qualified Asian women,
although none seems to be on the current list of candidates. Sadako
Ogata, from Japan, served as UN high commissioner for many years.
Nafis Sadik of Pakistan served as executive director of the UN Population
Fund. Anson Chan served with distinction as head of Hong Kong's
civil service. Leticia Shahani was president of the Philippine Senate,
as well as a UN assistant secretary general. Clearly women qualify.
The Security Council has only to look for them.
Speaking on International Women's Day
this spring, Secretary General Kofi Annan noted that the role of
women in decision making is "central to the advancement of
women around the world, and to the progress of humankind as a whole,"
and expressed his view that "the world is ready for a woman
secretary general." The secretary general is right -- we are
ready and waiting. Unfortunately, his record does not match his
words: the percentage of women serving as managers on his staff
has decreased since 2004, and he replaced the first female deputy
secretary general with a man. As high-level vacancies arise, there
is little indication that any effort is made to identify and recruit
qualified women.
Women's unequal access to positions
of power in the United Nations hinders progress toward all the organization's
goals, including equality, development, and peace. Eleanor Roosevelt,
who played a critical role in the early years of the United Nations,
reminded us that universal human rights begin in small places, close
to home, in this case the halls of the United Nations. She said,
"Unless these rights have meaning there, they have little meaning
anywhere."
Jessica Neuwirth is a Women's Media
Center board member and president of Equality Now, an international
women's rights organization.
From: http://www.alternet.org/story/41482/
|