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UN needs resourceful, powerful
agency for women's empowerment
June 26, 2006 - (OneWorld) At a time when the whole world is debating
over the issues of reforming the United Nations to meet the challenges
of the 21 st century, gender activists and civil society organizations
have called on the global body to set up a resourceful and powerful
nodal agency to carry out the challenging work of women's empowerment.
Just as the UN has a separate nodal agency like UNICEF to work in
the field of helping children, the activists have demanded that
an agency be set up to work for women. “There is, indeed,
an agency (for women) called UNIFEM, which has been doing a commendable
job.
Unfortunately, the UNIFEM has not been provided with adequate resources
and authority,” said Bandana Rana, a leading activist and
former chairperson of National Women’s Commission. Activists
lament what they call a ‘meager’ budget, resources and
authority to the UNIFEM compared with the vast responsibilities
it has to shoulder. “Compared to other agencies like UNICEF,
UNIFEM gets a paltry budget. It also is not able to conduct country
programs,” said an official at the UNIFEM office. Besides,
it also has structural weaknesses.
“UN reform without a separate, definitive track for women
is a travesty. The vehicle that would seem, on the surface to best
embody the hopes and needs of women is UNIFEM, the UN Development
Fund for Women. But (presently) its not even an agency, it’s
a mere department of UNDP, and it has a budget so modest and staff
so small as to belie any possibility of an agency on a grand scale.
I don’t belittle UNIFEM, it does its best, but its best is
shackled by a lethal combination of parsimony and misogyny within
the international system,” stated Stephen Lewis, UN Special
Envoy for HIV/AIDS in Africa, criticizing how the women’s
issues are not getting the attention they deserve.
Women activists around the world are pushing for creating an independent
strong women’s agency led by a high-level official with autonomy
and adequate resources. “And given the past track record,
UNIFEM has the potential to work most fruitfully for the sake of
women if it is scaled up and provided with resources and authority,”
said Rana.
The campaign to strengthen the women’s body in the UN has
gained speed after the Secretary General Kofi Annan formed a high-level
panel in February this year. The panel comprising fifteen members
including heads of governments will recommend the SG on UN System-wide
Coherence in the areas of Development, Humanitarian Assistance,
and the Environment.
Later on, as per the appeal by the women activists, the SG has expanded
the mandate of the Coherence Panel to include both “gender
equality architecture” of the UN and gender mainstreaming,
and has made gender equality a cross-cutting issue for all three
themes.
The Panel is expected to submit its recommendations by the end of
August 2006 in order to go to the General Assembly in September.
Women activists in South Asia have spearheaded the campaign to strengthen
UNIFEM in the forthcoming UN reform process. A delegation of South
Asian women who have been working for women’s rights and development
recently met with Prime Minister of Pakistan Shaukat Aziz, who is
a co-chair of the Coherence Panel, to put forth their demands in
the process of UN reform.
“We understand that the UN Reform Process will review and
make recommendations on gender architecture in the UN system. We
would like to draw your attention to UNIFEM’s role and responsibility
as the agency within the UN System working holistically and with
consistency on gender equality and women’s rights.”
“This agency emerged in 1976 from the call of the women’s
movement to the General Assembly for creating an institution with
the mandate and resource to give visibility and voice for women’s
rights and their implementation. However our experience shows that
UNIFEM was not given the structure, position and resources appropriate
for a lead agency on women,” leading women activists from
South Asian countries stated in a written letter they handed over
to Aziz during their recent visit to Islamabad.
The signatories of the letter include Prof. Savitri Goonesekere
( Sri Lanka ), Prof. Pam Rajput ( India ), Prof. Hameeda Hossain
( Bangladesh ), Prof. Mahmuda Islam ( Bangladesh ), Bandana Rana
( Nepal ), Dr. Chandra Bhadra ( Nepal ), Nigar Ahmed ( Pakistan
), Khalida Salimi ( Pakistan ) and Maria Rashid ( Pakistan ).
“We trust that UNIFEM will be recognized as a high-powered
nodal agency to carry forward the agenda for gender equality. If
such a nodal agency is not created there is a danger that all the
gains of the past three decades on gender equality and women’s
rights will be completely undermined,” they further stated.
South Asian women activists have hailed the contribution made by
UNIFEM in strengthening partnership between civil society and governments,
strengthening South Asian Regional Cooperation, giving visibility
to women’s economic contribution and gender inequalities in
data collection processes, implementation of Beijing Platform for
Action (BPFA) and Convention on Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination
Against Women (CEDAW).
In South Asian countries, including Nepal , activists are engaged
in signature campaign, among others, to press for scaling up UNIFEM
in the future UN reform initiative.
In Nepal, UNIFEM has been credited w ith successful policy advocacy
on various areas including the promotion of rights of migrant women
workers, anti-trafficking program, recognition of home-based workers,
following up of BPFA, gender responsive budgeting, advocating for
women participation in peace process and so on.
As such, it will be in the interest of entire world if the international
body like UN takes note of the campaigns being launched by women
across the globe calling for effective strategy and structure to
deal with the gender-related problems.
Frome: http://southasia.oneworld.net/article/view/135574/1/
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