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The fourth
pillar: Women press for real changes in the UN
AsiaWOMENet
May 11, 2006 (AWID) In March 2006,
South North Development Monitor published an article by Martin Khor,
entitled: United Nations: Developed countries press for big changes
in UN structure. The article was subsequently circulated by Global
Policy Forum. (http://www.globalpolicy.org/reform/docs00/0328bigchanges.htm)
Many women looking at the UN reform debate welcomed the article,
which emphasized the failure by the major contributors' papers to
address the concerns of developing countries. Two months later,
it seems there is another side of the debate that is also getting
little attention. Women are not being heard: when a few speak, what
they are saying is not reaching the decision-makers, nor the communities
that should be exerting influence on the course of UN reform. We
will be grateful if you can lend a hand to circulate the present
article on this topic, through your networks and links.
As Martin Khor has shown, the debate has produced various scenarios,
most of which amount to a call for a slimming down of the roster
of UN agencies to "three pillars": for development, humanitarian
and environmental affairs (with some specialized agencies continuing
as "centres of excellence" or "think tanks").
Where are women in the pillars? In every paper cited by Khor, women's
concerns, if they are mentioned at all, are to be swallowed up into
one super-agency that will constitute the "development pillar."
Our view is that gender and women's rights are a vital dimension
at the core, not only of development, humanitarian assistance and
the environment, but also the headline events and strategic concerns
of our time that surround and overreach these subjects: the intractability
of the HIV/AIDS pandemic; persistent conflicts and troubled peace
building (the agonies of rape and starvation in Darfur, the dilemma
of the Middle East, and the endless misery of daily life in Iraq
are only three of the most reported); the struggle over fundamentalisms
and terror; the depletion of our Earth's ability to nurture us that
increases the suffering of the poor of every continent - with the
destruction of forests, wetlands and fisheries, and the exacerbated
burden of care that is the responsibility of women everywhere; and
the accelerating pace of health crises and humanitarian emergencies.
This paper raises four issues that we feel need to be discussed
in the UN reform debate
1. The reform debate has been unrealistically confined, and directed
to limit the UN's reach to three areas. These are only a partial
identification of the concerns of the world's people. Within this
limited perspective, the place of women has been further ghettoized
into just one of these. The reform process, and specifically the
High-level Coherence Panel, is failing to redress these shortcomings,
despite the clear instructions of the General Assembly and the Secretary
General, and despite the expressed views of gender equity advocates
around the world.
2. Gender is not "one sector among many." It is a cross-cutting
dimension of peace, development and the survival of our planet -
it cannot be shunted out of this debate.
3. It is time the participants committed to a Fourth Pillar - an
effective UN agency for women to champion the integration of the
dimension of gender throughout the UN's work - in peacekeeping and
humanitarian work, in development and justice, in the environment
and human health.
4. This agency must be properly resourced, able to act as an equal
partner, and designed to reflect the ways its constituency works:
the direct, grassroots and practical style that the best women's
campaigns have shown the world, within and around the UN. (We can
think of women's role in peace campaigns like Northern Ireland,
and the Bougainville/PNG conflict; the role of grandmothers taking
up the support of the HIV/AIDS orphans of southern Africa, the link
between women and forest renewal in the work of Wangari Maathai,
among many.) A new-style women's agency would be a leader in the
imagination of the UN.
The UN reform process needs to get serious about this. It is one
of the vital questions at the heart of development, peace and justice.
If it does not, the process will confirm in the minds of the world's
people who witness it that it is rushing headlong down a side road.
While there are those in the rich countries who have been saying
that the UN must "reform or die", we say, make this process
the beginning of real reform, or it is the people who look to the
UN for hope who will die. Is the reform process looking at the vital
questions?
The "prime venue and vehicle for reforming the operational
activities of the UN as part of the broad UN reform process"
is, as Khor states, the high-level "Coherence Panel",
named by Secretary General Kofi Annan on 16 February 2006.
But the brief of the Panel looks limited, by contrast with the expectations
for reform. It is not being asked to look broadly at the UN's mandate
and capability to build peace and justice for the world's women,
men and children, even though the seminal document In Larger Freedom
(March 2005) prepared for the 60th General Assembly and claimed
as the reform's guiding prospectus, did take such a broad, strategic
view.
As Khor has pointed out, the Panel's schedule is alarmingly rushed.
Its first meeting was held in early April, few additional meetings
are planned, and it is expected to complete its report by August
for discussion at the General Assembly in September.
"To set such a punishing deadline for a panel of very busy
people to come out with a report proposing changes on such a complex
set of issues is both extremely ambitious and surprising, to say
the least. Among other things, the panel is to propose how in future
the UN and its agencies will operate on the ground at national level
as well as at the top at the headquarters level, and also examine
how funds to all the organisations and at the ground will be coordinated
and channeled…"
Not only is the Panel limited to its three themes; further, only
the narrowest field of focus has been set - basically operational
efficiency and technical support, with gender, conflict prevention
and post-conflict reconstruction, and domestic governance relegated
to a list of so-called "niche" areas. As Khor explains:
"In terms of issues that the UN should be involved in, a reading
of the papers [from the rich countries] and speeches of the reform
advocates indicate that the UN's development work will in future
comprise mainly technical assistance, focusing on the poorer countries,….
complemented by specialized agencies in the area of health, food
and labour standards.
"In this scenario, the UN's work in development policy (inter-governmental
consensus building, research, and policy advice and technical assistance
to developing countries) is not given any prominence (or even any
mention, in the case of some of the papers). This is an area which
may diminish, if not disappear, in the scenario of the advocates,
as they view the Bretton Woods institutions or the WTO as having
a "comparative advantage" in this area."
The rush to produce a reform proposal, together with the focus on
operational efficiency, highlights the dangerous flaw in the Panel's
brief. How can a major fix of the UN's structure be constructed
on a foundation of discussion that is this partial and constrained?
In Larger Freedom addressed human rights, democracy and the rule
of law, peace and security, and development, and the necessity to
strengthen the UN to achieve for all people freedom from want and
from fear, as well as the freedom to live in dignity. This agenda
made room for the themes of diversity, gender equality and social
inclusiveness. But the broad and bold perspective of 2005 was curbed
when the time came to set the agenda for "a strengthened UN."
"Could try harder"
The Coherence Panel came into existence as a result of instructions
of the General Assembly 60th Session in September 2005. That session
directed Secretary General Kofi Annan to report back in six months
time on his creation of the High-level Panel to spearhead UN reform,
and to review the mandates of UN agencies to guide the Panel in
its work. Annan's report of March 2006 (Mandating and Delivering
http://www.un.org/mandatereview/0628304.pdf) did include gender
in its review; the document provides a succinct report card on the
UN's results in integrating gender dimensions into its structures
and operations. It specifically points to a failure to turn commitments
into action:
"[Gender] mandates … call on all relevant parts of the
system to take concrete action to promote gender equality, but they
rarely specify action required from particular entities, resulting
in both duplication and gaps in support for the implementation of
global commitments on gender equality." It singles out the
failure to strengthen Member States' "capacity to mainstream
gender issues at the national level." Overall, the report gives
a low grade, for effort as well as achievement.
Encouragingly, therefore, the report engages the review process
to examine "progress in the implementation of commitments on
gender equality and gender mainstreaming, including the status of
the institutional architecture and resource allocation in this area,
as well as the mechanisms in place to ensure coherence and coordination
across the system." In that spirit, the SG stated:
"I will ask the High-level Panel on System-wide Coherence to
include in its work an assessment of how gender equality, including
through gender mainstreaming, can be better and more fully addressed
in the work of the United Nations, particularly in its operational
activities on the ground." (para 131)
Given this engagement, it is disturbing that the Panel's terms of
reference make no mention of the issue of gender, even though the
SG's report stated that, "Gender equality and the empowerment
of women are among those issues that, like the environment, peacebuilding
and human rights, have been increasingly cutting across the work
of the Organization" (para. 125). Noting the creation of specific
international structures to mainstream and strengthen environment,
peace and human rights work, the report explicitly stated:
"Gender-related issues deserve equal attention. The 2005 Summit
Outcome reiterates that "progress for women is progress for
all" and reflects the commitments of Member States to "strengthen
the capabilities of the United Nations system in the area of gender".
(para. 126)
Today it appears neither the Panel, nor the principal countries
drafting proposals for its consideration (those reviewed in Khor's
paper) have read Mandating and Delivering. Thus far, the Panel has
not held consultations on gender, and has not made a commitment
to bring gender into sharp focus in its deliberations or its proposals.
The 6 April inaugural meeting of the Panel with Member States did
not place gender on its agenda.
As news of this embarrassing omission has reached women, civil society
organizations have raised a hue and cry. Three international women's
organizations wrote to the Panel immediately after the 6 April meeting,
calling on it to "integrate gender as a cross-cutting issue
into its program of work and make strong recommendations in its
final report for more effective UN mechanisms to achieve gender
equality in development, humanitarian affairs, and environment,
as well as in human rights and peace-keeping." (http://www.wedo.org/library.aspx?ResourceID=106)
Two weeks later, a delegation of South Asian women met with Panel
Co-Chair Prime Minister Shaukat Aziz of Pakistan, on 22 April 2006.
The group called on Aziz to ensure that the Panel holds consultations
with women's organizations and national machineries, and to facilitate
a special gender hearing in Pakistan before the Coherence Panel.
Unpromisingly, the only commitment Aziz made was that he "would
look into the possibility" of holding a special gender hearing.
However, even at this point he warned that the schedule of the panel
may be too tight to allow for any such addition. Aziz expressed
confidence that the reforms would strengthen the role of a gender
agency, and stated that he was "200 percent committed to gender
equality." But what did Aziz confide about his own perspective
on how women have scored so far in the world organization? In his
view, he said, women have not used their leverage adequately, to
mobilize women's groups more broadly. It looks like Aziz is pointing
the finger at the women's structures themselves.
This does not augur well. It does not seem probable that the Panel
Co-Chair has any intention to radically transform the debate with
respect to gender.
Within the next ten days, the response of women's groups accelerated.
On 3 May a group of representatives of a broad range of NGO networks
met with Secretary General Kofi Annan to discuss the need for reform
proposals to address the gender architecture. Annan, like Aziz before
him, promised consideration but extended a caution. "It would
be difficult to advocate for the creation of a new independent women's
agency at this time," he warned, "in part because of expected
government resistance."
The UN structures at the top levels have set out their position.
The message is familiar: "It is not yet time." Fortunately,
the expanding networks of women's organizations joining this discussion
have not been put off. The challenge to persuade national governments,
and the equally important one to move the mindset of the Coherence
Panel itself, has been taken up in a campaign of Internet organizing
to seize this moment. Communications via network briefing notes
in regions from the Pacific to the Caribbean are diffusing the message
that "at a time of fast-paced UN reform" this is the moment
to "take action critical to advancing gender equality".1
Too often these women have been told that the organizational changes
they need are not yet appropriate, or feasible, or that the time
is not yet ripe. They are familiar with the admonition to wait for
now, and to abide by the agenda as set out by those in charge. They
are equally familiar with the disappointing results of reform processes
that result in another set of recommendations, promises and targets,
but no teeth. The lesson they have drawn from repeated let-downs
is that change will come only when women demand a hearing, and in
this case, that UN reform, like mainstreaming, needs a champion
for the cause of women's rights.
There is another question that begs asking. Why has little or nothing
been heard from advocates inside the UN about the disregard of gender
in the reform discussion? The reason does not lie in a lack of discontent.
But women inside the UN agencies, whether they work in one of the
under-funded gender mandate units, or elsewhere, are hesitant to
speak up. They know that under the banner of "coherence",
some agencies are going to disappear, and some staff jobs will disappear.
The spectre of turf wars looms, and wherever there is a proliferation
of agencies with overlapping mandates and inadequate budgets, the
atmosphere of embattlement and tension is thick. Staff with careers
and pensions to preserve are afraid. If staff are to be reassured
enough to join the debate, the SG needs to declare a season of amnesty,
to enable them to participate without fear of reprisal. The UN needs
to tell its staff and management that no reprisal will be tolerated
against any person who joins the reform discussion, whether publicly
or informally.
Beyond this, individual agencies should not hesitate to mobilize
their own staff and constituencies, to campaign for a structure
that meets the needs of women. An opportunity exists now to overcome
the handicaps of poverty and bureaucracy that have impeded the championing
of women's rights and the true mainstreaming of gender concerns
into every area of UN work - if, and this is a big if, the agenda
can be opened up.
Calendar for a Fourth Pillar: closing the "commitment
gap"
The High-level Panel is to report to the General Assembly by September
2006. But we do not need to hold our breath until then to discern
whether gender will be taken seriously. If the Panel is to provide
a proposal that keeps the promise of Mandating and Delivering, it
needs to take some steps along the way. A serious process would
need first, to listen to views from those who are working for gender
equity. This means the Panel must announce its willingness to hold
a special hearing on gender, without conditions, and allocate sufficient
support and time to make this hearing meaningful. If a calendar
for such a hearing is not announced within the next month, there
is little hope it can be meaningful, and there can be little expectation
that the input on the dimension of gender will be adequate to the
needs of a serious review. If it is not possible to hold a hearing
on gender before the Panel reports in September, any belief that
the reform process as now constituted is going to take substantial
steps to beef up gender in the UN structure appears naïve.
Second, the Panel would need to announce a call for proposals to
define the role and status of an agency that will be capable of
championing gender equity so as to ensure real mainstreaming in
the UN country programmes. This would include commissioning or assisting
the preparation of a core paper on the future gender architecture.
It is evident from the expressions of concern of a growing corps
of advocates, and the circumspect lobbying from within, that a fair
gender hearing will see calls for this new architecture. If the
reform process fails to facilitate this exercise, it will not have
addressed the issue.
Third, it should announce the integration of the above steps into
the calendar already fixed from now to the September 2006 General
Assembly. These include:
* A series of two-to-three consultative "field visits"
by the Panel, set for Mozambique, Islamabad, and a possible third
site. These visits should be defined to accommodate the gender hearing
or hearings.
* A second meeting of the full Panel in June, in Geneva. The Gender
Fourth Pillar should appear on the agenda and in the report of this
meeting.
* The ECOSOC session of July, in which the Panel is to hold further
consultation with member states. This occasion should enable the
Panel to table for endorsement a commitment to the creation of a
Fourth Pillar, in the medium term.
* A draft report of the Panel, ready for consideration prior to
the General Assembly Session of September 2006. The report should
envisage the creation, in the medium term, without the hindrance
of the short-term deadlines, of a stand-alone, core-funded, agency
for women's rights and empowerment, on the scale of an agency such
as UNICEF. The report should endorse the agency as a Fourth Pillar,
tasked to champion and assist genuine mainstreaming of gender concerns
throughout the UN system.
Gender has not made it to the mainstream
The gender-and-development alignment within the UN, broadly defined,
adopted the strategy called gender mainstreaming in the "Nairobi
period", the process around the 1985 World Conference on Women,
and further articulated it ten years later around the Beijing conference
period. The identification of this concept stemmed from the recognition
of a persistent paradox: the characteristic meagerness of resources
accorded to national and global women's machineries, set against
the pervasive, dramatic and fundamental nature of gender equity
issues and injustices. The only way that such an enormous mismatch
can be addressed is via a strategy that makes the responsibility
for gender justice that of every level of government and every structure
of global cooperation - mainstreaming gender into every context
where women and men are present. But the recognition of the need
to mainstream gender advocacy is a far cry from implementation.
One of the earliest lessons from the struggle to put mainstreaming
into practice was that the strategy is doomed if there is not a
powerful agency to champion it. This lesson is true at every level,
from national government to UN country office, to the international
arena. Learning to incorporate gender awareness into every part
of social action, and teaching this approach to policy makers and
practitioners in every domain, requires skills and resources. In
the decade since Beijing, reviews of mainstreaming in areas as diverse
as peacekeeping, macroeconomic management, and health care have
reached similar conclusions: gender concerns remain ghettoized in
tiny pockets of interest, but are absent from the main table and
whenever the budget is discussed. Why? Because the people who have
expertise in gender-aware practice are few in number, and under
resourced; the agencies charged with fostering good practice suffer
from inadequate technical capacity for analysis of the gendered
fault lines in each discipline. The institutions have limited technical
capacity to support the specialized skills needed. And in a vicious
cycle sparked by the crippling of gender institutions, the mainstream
policy bodies of the UN and the Member States rarely encounter a
"champion" of change, and can therefore comfortably forget
the whole matter in their day-to-day work. (NGOs in the UN-linked
Millennium+5 Network call this the "commitment gap" -
the fall-off between ratification and implementation.)
Distressingly at this time, the UN reform process presents another
instance of this common memory lapse. Watching events, the Association
for Women's rights in Development reported, "Current initiatives
to reform the UN have women wondering if the organization is not
merely paying lip service to the principle of gender equality. The
fact that only three of the 15 members of the Coherence Panel are
women lends credence to this suspicion. Two hundred and forty women
from all over the world who attended [the 2006] UN Commission on
the Status of Women (CSW) sent an open letter to the UN expressing
their discontent: 'We are disappointed and frankly outraged that
gender equality and strengthening the women's machineries within
the UN system are barely noted, and are not addressed as a central
part of the reform agenda. Again, we must ask how it can be that
more than ten years after the commitment to gender parity at the
Beijing Conference, the UN is still offering only token representation
of women on critical committees, high level expert panels and in
senior positions within the organization."2
Once again, then, gender has not been put on the table where the
decisions are being made.
Almost mainstream is not enough
The era of the Millennium Declaration has presented us with the
bitterest images of human suffering in the context of gender inequity.
Two examples can be used to illustrate.
The HIV/AIDS pandemic is a manifestation of the power imbalance
between women and men - women's inability to negotiate safe sex
- played out with the most devastating of consequences: from the
ravaging of the African continent, and overwhelmingly its women,
to the emerging risk of similar catastrophe in the rising crisis
in Asia and Eastern Europe. Women have become the group with the
fastest-growing rate of new infections, and in the major sites,
marriage itself has become the greatest risk factor - a pairing
of the biological vulnerability of women with the double standard
in sexual behaviour.
But equally, the stubborn growth of the pandemic is a manifestation
of the failure of the UN system, and the global health and humanitarian
aid systems as a whole, to meet women's needs - in practical terms,
on the ground. Look at the affordable, feasible goal of halting
mother-to-child transmission (MTCT) of the virus through the provision
of antiretrovirals. The target set by the UN General Assembly in
2001 aimed to reduce the proportion of HIV-positive infants by 20
per cent by 2005, and by 50 per cent in 2010. The 2005 target was
not met, in any region of the developing world. Despite an objective
of full access, fewer than 10 percent of HIV-positive women in developing
countries got antiretroviral therapy during pregnancy and childbirth
between 2003 and 2005.
In Cambodia, despite knowledge of the prevention of MTCT approach,
and major infusions of drugs into the system, UNFPA this year reports
that one third of all new HIV infections are via the MTCT route
(and another 42 percent occur from transmission by husbands to their
wives). What is going wrong? The World Health Organization in its
"3 by 5" report states "there is no evidence of a
systemic gender bias in access to treatment…" although,
"in a few cases far fewer women are accessing treatment than
what would be expected given the extent of need. In Ethiopia, for
instance, just over 30% of the adults on treatment are women, while
the expected percent based on need would be closer to 55%."3
How often have we heard such statements - that the results reveal
no bias? And, more crucially, where is the analysis of why clear,
feasible targets are failing to be met? The mitigated success of
the "3 by 5" campaign, like the pandemic as a whole, has
been analysed by economists, epidemiologists, journalists and NGO
campaigners. And yet in all this analysis, no UN agency has focused
its attention on how it is that women can be missed and let down
by programmes that are able to attract funds but cannot get those
funds to the doorsteps where they are needed. No "mainstream"
agency has laid out the basic, ineluctable truth that AIDS is a
gender issue, and that until the world understands and acts on this
understanding, neither HIV/AIDS nor gender inequity will be resolved.
No organization has had the daring to state, with the unflinching
honesty of SG Annan's Special Envoy Stephen Lewis, that the technical
fixes may not be enough to beat the virus:
In principle, the majority of such women will one day fall under
public antiretroviral treatment through their ministries of health.
But there's no guarantee of when, or if, that day will dawn. It's
entirely possible that men will be at the front of the bus. Everything
proceeds at a glacial pace when responding to the needs and rights
of women. (http://www.msmagazine.com/fall2004/microbicides.asp)
Women need an agency that takes them as its core concern, and has
the resources to ensure that meeting their specific needs, in ways
that work for them, is the perspective at the heart of every strategy,
agency and initiative to fight HIV/AIDS - be it health initiatives,
economic schemes, political campaigns or cultural programmes.
An example that is more broadly drawn but equally devastating arises
from the transformation in the nature of conflicts since the end
of the two-superpower era to "new types of war", such
as the war on terror and multilateral state interventions, associated
with the breakdown of order, livelihood systems and social norms.
The effects of such social breakdown are by definition visited on
civilians, and arguably strike women as caregivers at least as severely
as men. But what recognition of this reality is brought to bear
on the high-profile negotiations of settlements? Even when women
are the direct victims of state-sponsored violence by troops or
by officially sanctioned militias that engage in systematic assault
on the female population as a deliberate weapon of ethnic cleansing
- as has been seen in the Balkan wars and the current Sudanese conflict,
to name only two - where do we see a sustained effort to give women
representation at the peace table?
We have no agency in the UN that can stand as the champion of an
historic campaign to create recognition that there is a clear, legitimate
interest of women in the consequences of war and the struggle for
peace. In the drawn-out processes of rebuilding war-ravaged societies,
women can play a crucial role in creating a new model of participation
and public choice. But who will fight to bring this conception of
governance to the stage? The model will not grow to reality with
the quality of implementation of "gender mainstreaming"
as we now know it. We can look at the example of Iraq, where the
military, political and technical support of powerful nations and
UN agencies has been poured into reconstruction. In the complex
negotiations to establish a governance structure, every sectarian
interest group is represented. But there is no visible effort to
ensure an autonomous voice of women - because there is an evident
belief that gender matters come later, after the establishment of
security and stability. The framework of mainstream governance theory
has no place for the hypothesis that the very absence of female
voices is a factor that contributes to instability, permanent tension,
and the death of communities.
Examples of the social consequences of women's exclusion from leadership
abound. This month the UN has once again admitted that in West Africa
refugee women and girls are under pressure to trade sex for food
rations, under the watch of its relief agencies, and sometimes by
its staff. But although this scandal has been exposed and deplored
for more than four years now, no strategy has been identified to
root out its causes. It is time to state, in loud and clear terms,
that no empowerment of women has taken place in the humanitarian
relief system; on the contrary, the structure has systematically
provided a means to subject women most effectively to violence and
abuse. The structures are dominated by men in power, in armed groups
and in control of rationed resources. A concerted attack on this
set-up would involve the systematic recruitment of women into peace-keeping
forces, a change in the style and ethos of such forces, and a massive
induction of women into relief and rehabilitation agencies. What
global agency will espouse the adoption of such strategies, and
mobilize the resources to put them into action?
Women who have called for such strategies worked for the adoption
of UN Security Council Resolution 1325 (October 2000). Among other
measures, the resolution called for "an increase in the participation
of women at decision-making levels in conflict resolution and peace
processes" and in every other pertinent body, including "more
women as special representatives and envoys," and expansion
of "the role and contribution of women in United Nations field-based
operations, and especially among military observers, civilian police,
human rights and humanitarian personnel." Yet today, in 2006,
these measures remain inoperative. Pacific women, who since 2000
in several countries experienced serious armed conflicts and a heightened
incidence of violence against women, have used every forum at their
disposal to call for action on 1325, including Commonwealth and
UN events. Their calls remain unanswered. The current discussion
of UN reform is providing a setting in which a growing dissatisfaction
with the reality of implementation is being expressed. There is
a rising conviction that in these and other situations, one fatal
handicap has been the lack of a powerful agency to collect and give
voice to the needs and solutions women want.
They are calling for an effective agency: not a poor and under-funded
"niche" entity that provides nothing but a fig-leaf of
decency for the UN while practical action suffers. Not an agency
that must spend 80 percent of its time in sales campaigns to raise
paltry operating funds, because the UN structure does not see fit
to place gender equity at the core of its budget priorities.
An effective agency, born of experience
More and more voices are saying that the solution is not simply
to cluster together the existing, hobbled agencies, nor to shunt
gender matters onto a specialized agency that focuses on one sphere
of gender concerns, such as reproductive health. Nor is gender to
be confined to one part of UN work, in development. Groups active
in every sphere have demonstrated that gender issues are present
in the organic constitution of peace and conflict, the nature of
epidemics, and the relationship of human communities to the environment.
While the issues are expressed with many voices, on broad and strategic
concerns, the reform context has provided a moment for one common
expression: as ever, women need to speak from all of their concerns
and constituencies - and they need one place where they can do this
to reach the global community. A growing number are calling for
an agency that is resourced to spearhead their cause, consistently
and in every domain. The nature of this agency, in design and detail,
is precisely the topic that the Coherence Panel should place on
its programme. The Panel needs hearings on this; it needs to ask
for the views of women, and all who have been struggling for years
to achieve gender equality without the appropriate machinery in
place. This is the expertise the Panel needs to summon.
As the UN reform agenda is honed, the delegates at the rostrum are
being alerted to their obligations. They are susceptible to the
views of their constituencies. And UN officials, in their heart
of hearts, know that a major discussion of the gender architecture
cannot now be avoided. The issues on the table are not ones that
will be met by a technical, quick-fix, because daily realities demonstrate
that something more fundamental is needed. At the press briefing
for the 6 April Panel session, Deputy Secretary-General Mark Malloch
Brown acknowledged the urgency of more deep-going reform than has
already been accomplished. Recognizing the inefficacy of previous,
partial efforts, he conceded, "The world has changed faster
than the UN."
It is time for the UN to begin to move in pace with the world, and
the people of the world.
Any comments may be sent to AsiaWOMENet at: nilamori@gmail.com
Notes
1. See, for example, newslinks of African Democracy Forum, Association
for Women's Rights in Development, Baha'i International Community,
BAOBAB for Women's Human Rights, Center for Women's Global Leadership,
Development Alternatives with Women for a New Era, International
Center for Research on Women, International Planned Parenthood Federation-Western
Hemisphere, International Women's Tribune Center, Pacific Women's
Information Network , Women Living Under Muslim Laws, Women's Environment
and Development Organization, Women's International League for Peace
and Freedom.
2. An Open Letter on Women & UN Reform to the Secretary General
and Member States from NGOs present at the 50th Session of the Commission
on the Status of Women, March 6, 2006. Cited in (Kathambi Kinoti,
Resource Net Friday File, Issue 269, April 7, 2006. AWID)
3. "3 by 5" refers to the UN campaign to make antiretroviral
treatment available to 3 million HIV-positive persons by 2005, described
in: World Health Organization and Joint United Nations Programme
on HIV/AIDS. Treating 3 Million by 2005: Making It Happen, the WHO
Strategy. Geneva, WHO 2003.
From: http://www.whrnet.org/docs/issue-pillar-0605.html
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