27 September 2023

We too! Women’s voices ring loud at the UN’s gathering of nations

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Angela Charlton* says some of the most powerful speeches at the latest UN General Assembly came from women leaders.


At a pivotal time for women, the United Nations put forth its own clarion set of female voices at its annual meeting of nations.

And women’s empowerment was only one of their rallying cries.

At the UN General Assembly that began at the end of September, the first since the #metoo movement took root last year and began to amplify women’s voices in a new way, some of the most powerful words have come from the mouths of female leaders, a group whose numbers, influence and ambitions for the planet are on the rise.

Female leaders presented roadmaps for peace in Central Africa and the Balkans, challenged governments to fight anti-Semitism, exposed the dangers of trade barriers and resisted — or espoused — nationalist rhetoric.

Serbia’s Prime Minister, Ana Brnabic called for a “world which is freer, fairer, and which is also, if I am to be honest, more fun”.

The number of women Presidents and Prime Ministers among the UN’s 193 member states doubled — to 19 — from 2005 to 2016, according to a report released last year by the UN and the Inter-Parliamentary Union, an independent group.

Women held about 18 per cent of the Government Minister posts and 23 per cent of parliamentary seats worldwide, the report found.

This year, the UN itself set the tone, listing women’s rights as the number one priority for this year’s General Assembly, which ended last week.

“Violence against women persists in all regions,” said General Assembly President and Ecuadoran politician, María Fernanda Espinosa Garces.

“Girls and teenagers still lack enough access to information and quality education.”

She said discrimination against women also depresses the global economy.

Her message came at an exceptional cultural moment for women across the United States.

As world leaders converged at the United Nations, Americans (and some at the UN) watched an odd and, to many, troubling spectacle as US Senators questioned a man who wants to serve on the highest court of the land and a woman who says he sexually assaulted her more than three decades ago.

The testimony prompted public argument and private soul-searching over the entrenched sexism that still underlines relations between men and women in the United States.

But hearing some of the addresses delivered at the United Nations, it was clear: in many places beyond American borders, gender equality remains an even more distant dream.

“It seems surprising that in this modern age we have to recommit ourselves to gender equality, but we do,” said New Zealand Prime Minister, Jacinda Ardern (pictured).

“We still have a gender pay gap, an over representation of women in low-paid work, and domestic violence.”

“And we are not alone.”

“I, for one, will never celebrate the gains we have made for women domestically, while internationally other women and girls experience a lack of the most basic rights,” she said.

Ardern drew additional attention for bringing her baby to the UN, but she said she wanted to make a broader point: that breastfeeding while leading a government should be ordinary, not newsworthy.

That, in fact, was part of what was so extraordinary about this Assembly: women leading, orating and outlining policy on topics that had absolutely nothing to do with gender.

Yet women at the UN podium, like women leaders everywhere, still came under extra scrutiny.

They combined authority and compassion, carving out their space in world affairs:

  • British Prime Minister, Theresa May and Lithuanian President, Dalia Grybuskaite stood up firmly against what they called Russian aggression.
  • Estonian President, Kersti Kaljulaid vaunted her country’s exceptional high-tech vision for the future.
  • Director of the UN Educational, Scientific and Cultural Organisation (UNESCO), General Audrey Azoulay rallied Arab countries around a plan to use schools to fight anti-Semitism.
  • Costa Rican Vice-President, Epsy Campbell Barr, whose country’s Parliament comprises 50 per cent women, proposed action against sexual violence used as a tactic of terrorists and a weapon of war.

Two women whose countries fought bitterly a generation ago, Croatian President, Kolinda Grabar-Kitarovic and Serbian Prime Minister, Ana Brnabic, presented paths to Balkan peace.

Both lead alongside men and are sometimes dismissed as window-dressing, but both strongly defended their nations and brought timely messages to New York.

Brnabic argued for a “world which will value people for who they are and the values and beliefs they stand for, rather than where they are from, what colour is their skin, or who they love”.

There is work to do.

Africa’s presence at the UN this year was glaringly male.

Africa’s first female President, Liberia’s Ellen Johnson Sirleaf left office this year, leaving a vacuum on the continent with the world’s fastest-growing population.

And the UN has yet to put a woman in charge.

But Secretary-General, Antonio Guterres has made a point to name women to top jobs, and at this Assembly they, too, made their mark.

Deputy Secretary-General, Amina Mohammad greeted US President, Donald Trump when he arrived at the United Nations.

Espinosa is the first Latin American woman to preside over a UN General Assembly and only the fourth woman to do so in over seven decades of UN history.

The sheer number of men celebrating Espinosa’s leadership of the General Assembly suggests change is in the air.

“This is yet another reflection of the fact that, in the twenty-first century, global governance is inconceivable without the leadership of women,” said Spanish Prime Minister, Pedro Sanchez.

“Now,” he said, “is the time for women.”

Associated Press journalist Cara Anna in Johannesburg contributed to this report.

* Angela Charlton is a journalist and bureau chief for Associated Press in France. She tweets at @acharlton.

This article first appeared at www.washingtonpost.com.

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