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**http://www.ipsnews.net/news.asp?idnews=32398


INT'L WOMEN'S DAY: Groups Blast U.N. on Gender Parity
Thalif Deen 




UNITED NATIONS, Mar 6 (IPS) - A coalition of international women's 
organisations -- including more than 240 women from over 50 countries -- has 
castigated both U.N. Secretary-General Kofi Annan and the 191 member states for 
paying "lip service" to the cause of gender parity in the world body. 

"We are disappointed and frankly outraged that gender equality and 
strengthening the women's machineries within the U.N. system are barely noted, 
and are not addressed as a central part of the U.N.'s reform agenda," says the 
letter released here, in advance of International Women's Day scheduled to be 
commemorated Wednesday. 

The letter is signed by the Centre for Women's Global Leadership, the U.N. 
Committee on the Status of Women, the Women's Environment and Development 
Organisation (WEDO) and the Women's International League for Peace and Freedom. 

The groups say they are disappointed over the appointment last week of Mark 
Malloch Brown of Britain to succeed Louise Frechette of Canada as the new 
deputy secretary-general, the second highest ranking job in the world body. 

The coalition says it expected a continued gender balance between the 
secretary-general and his deputy, and would have therefore preferred another 
woman to succeed Frechette. 

"We already knew that only lip service was being given to gender parity," 
WEDO's Executive Director June Zeitlin said Monday. 

"The United Nations is going in the wrong direction. We need new and innovative 
leadership and the way to get that is by ensuring we reach 50:50 women and men 
in all decision-making positions," Zeitlin said in a statement released here. 

"We are deeply concerned that the position of women in high-level U.N. posts 
has stagnated," the letter complains. 

The women's groups are also outraged that a short list of candidates released 
last week for the position of executive director of the U.N. Environment 
Programme (UNEP) does not contain a single woman. 

"This is unacceptable," says the letter," At the very least, the United Nations 
should set an example of gender balance in all high-level decision making 
positions." 

The all-male list of candidates for UNEP executive director includes: Borge 
Brende (Norway), a former minister of environment; Carlos Manuel Rodriguez 
Echandi (Costa Rica), currently minister of environment and energy; Shafqat 
Kakakhel (Pakistan), deputy executive director of UNEP; Rajendra K. Pachauri 
(India), director-general, Energy and Resource Institute; and Achim Steiner 
(Germany), director-general of the World Conservation Union. The outgoing UNEP 
executive director is Klaus Topfer of Germany. 

Last week, Rachel Mayanja, U.N. assistant secretary-general and special adviser 
on gender issues, provided a statistical update of the status of women in the 
Secretariat and the U.N. system. 

As of December 2005, she said, the percentage of women in the professional and 
higher categories was about 37.2 percent. "Basically, there was no change from 
last year," she pointed out. 

But women did lose some ground at senior levels. Women represent 26 percent of 
staff at the Director (D-1) level and above, a decrease of 2.9 percentage 
points since 2004. Women represent 27.3 percent at the D-1 level alone, a 
decrease of 5.2 percentage points since 2004. 

Mayanja also said that among the 31 individual departments or offices in the 
Secretariat (with 20 or more professional staff), only five have met or 
exceeded the gender balance target and 10 have reached 40 to 49 percent. 

"The lesson is clear. More concerted action is needed even to maintain the 
current representation of women, particularly at the D-1 and above level. 
Recruitment and retention must be targeted by level," she added. 

Mayanja also appealed to member states to "recommend qualified women for senior 
level positions to help us achieve the goal that you have mandated us". 

Meanwhile, the letter from the women's coalition says that for more than six 
decades, women's groups and others from around the world have been strong 
supporters of the United Nations. 

"We have actively shaped the U.N.'s work on peace, human rights, development, 
security and environmental issues, and, of course, on gender equality. The 
United Nations is at a critical juncture." 

At the 2005 World Summit last December, women's organisations successfully 
advocated for greater commitments on gender equality and expected to see these 
commitments implemented in the U.N. reform follow-up, the letter adds. But the 
results have been poor.. 

A wide ranging Platform of Action was adopted at the Fourth World Conference on 
Women in Beijing in 1995. 

"We must ask how it can be that more than 10 years after the commitment to 
gender parity at the Beijing Conference, the United Nations is still offering 
only token representation of women on critical committees, high level expert 
panels and in senior positions within the organisation," it says. 

The letter says that "mechanisms and processes dealing with U.N. reform have 
failed to display a consistent and visible commitment to gender equality and 
women's empowerment". 

For example, it points out that the new High-Level Panel on U.N. system-wide 
coherence in areas of development, humanitarian assistance and the environment 
has only three women out of 15 members. 

"We urge that additional women be added to the panel and that gender equality 
issues be explicitly considered under each theme," it says. 

Furthermore, it says, the panel should be mandated to hold consultations with 
civil society groups, especially those working on women's rights, in order to 
ensure consideration of the impact on women of any proposed reforms. 

Women's groups call for serious consideration to be given to the implications 
of the current reforms on the women's equality agenda, the letter notes. 

"The pattern of publicly adopted commitments and statements followed by lack of 
implementation sets a disheartening precedent which retards the work and 
reputation of the United Nations and impedes the urgently-needed progress of 
gender equality worldwide," the letter concludes. (END/2006) 


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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