U.N. urged to hire more women
By Nicholas Kralev
1 June 2007 – (The Washington Times) Secretary
of State Condoleezza Rice and 19 other female ministers, diplomats
and lawmakers from around the world called on the United Nations
yesterday to appoint more women in high-level positions, including
as special envoys to trouble spots.
Miss Rice and Austrian Foreign Minister Ursula
Plassnik co-hosted a meeting of the Women's Empowerment Network
Steering Group. The group was established by Miss Rice at the
U.N. General Assembly opening session in New York in September.
"The fact that there is currently no woman
among 54 United Nations envoys to conflict and post-conflict regions
is unacceptable," they said in a statement following the
meeting in Vienna, the Austrian capital.
The group urged U.N. Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon
"to increase the number of women among United Nations special
representatives and envoys including as heads of peace operations."
They pledged "to work towards the nomination of more women
as envoys and mediators also in other international and regional
organizations."
Participants in the session also included the
European Union's commissioner for external relations, Benita Ferrero-Waldner,
Israeli Foreign Minister Tzipi Livni, Palestinian legislator Hanan
Ashrawi and the outgoing U.N. General Assembly president, Haya
Rashed al-Khalifa of Bahrain.
The network's meeting accompanied a conference
on empowering women in the Middle East, but the group acknowledged
that many of the rights they are advocating clash with the region's
male-dominated religious and cultural traditions.
"It's absolutely the case that, unless women
are fully participants of their societies, these societies cannot
really be fully democratic, and that is something we are absolutely
devoted to," Miss Rice said.
"These have to be matters of choice, and
I emphasize particularly political rights, because without political
rights you can't possibly express choice," she said. "The
women of the Middle East are going to country by country and region
by region find the appropriate balance between tradition and women's
empowerment."
Miss Rice also said she has been "very warmly
received" during her travels in the Middle East and does
not "feel barriers." She noted, however, that in her
hosts' eyes she is first and foremost the U.S. secretary of state,
and then a woman.
Mrs. Plassnik, the Austrian foreign minister,
said that many "open wounds" in the Middle East will
be difficult to overcome.
"We have no illusions about the obstacles
still facing us, nor about the urgency for action," she said.
"Women in the Middle East are not just an amorphous mass
of people without rights and aspirations."
Mrs. Livni and Mrs. Ashrawi shook hands under
the glare of cameras and called for increased dialogue between
Israelis and Palestinians, which does not have to wait until their
decades-long conflict is resolved.
"This meeting is a starting point. It's
not the end. I hope we work together in order to make that difference,"
Mrs Ashrawi said.
Mrs. Livni said that, "at the end of the
day, we share the same threats."
From:http://www.washtimes.com/world/20070531-103431-3805r.htm