
PRESS RELEASE
International Womenıs Day - 8 March 2005
Statement by Noeleen Heyzer, Executive Director, UNIFEM
Celebrating Our Gains, Accelerating Change
International Womenıs Day 2005 marks a crossroads for women. In the decade
since Beijing, the signs of progress are many. There is
growing recognition that gender equality is a prerequisite for eradicating
poverty and promoting sustainable development, as stated in the
Millennium Declaration. The spread of HIV/AIDS has been recognized as a gender
issue, as well as a health issue, and the impact of war on
women and womenıs role in peace-building is recognized and validated by
Security Council resolution 1325. Womenıs human rights
monitored and upheld by the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of
Discrimination Against Women (CEDAW), and ratified by 179
countries are now on every major agenda, national, regional and international.
Legislation is being drafted to strengthen womenıs economic security in such
vital areas as land, property and inheritance rights, decent
employment, and access to credit and markets. At least 45 countries today have
laws against domestic violence, while over 20 more are
drafting new legislation or amending criminal assault laws to include domestic
violence. Governments are beginning to adopt gender-
sensitive laws and policies on HIV/AIDS prevention, treatment and care. And
quotas or other affirmative measures have been adopted to
increase womenıs representation in political decision-making in countries in
all regions, including many countries emerging from conflict which
are striving to build peaceful and more democratic societies.
At the heart of all these gains are womenıs rights and gender equality
advocates. On International Womenıs Day, we honour these
women, who tirelessly advocate, organize and mobilize to keep gender equality on
the table.
And yet, while we celebrate progress, we know that it has been too slow. Thirty
years after the beginning of the Decade on Women, and ten
years after Beijing, it is still a womanıs face we see when we speak of
poverty, of HIV/AIDS, of violent conflict and social upheaval, of
trafficking in human beings. Violence against women, already horrific in times
of peace, intensifies during armed conflict with sexual
violence now routinely used as a weapon of war. And women are everywhere
disproportionately concentrated in poorly paid, unsafe
and insecure jobs, struggling to lift themselves and their families out of
poverty.
To break the cycles of poverty, violence and gender discrimination, we need
to accelerate progress, and expand its reach. What will it take?
Above all, it takes determined implementation and greater accountability. In the
area of violence against women, to take one example, we
have learned how to make this happen. Since its establishment in 1997, the
UNIFEM Trust Fund to Eliminate Violence Against Women has
brought UN agencies and womenıs networks together to support 175 initiatives in
96 countries. The Trust Fund is now focusing specifically on
securing implementation of the vast array of laws and policies instituted to
address the multiple forms of violence that women face. Trust Fund
strategies work because they address multiple levels and multiple sectors
simultaneously, transforming power relationships and
strengthening womenıs organizing to address the social and economic causes of
gender violence; they focus on community ownership and
they include men as partners. Each year the Trust Fund receives far more
requests than it can meet: last year again, the Fund received more
than $15 million in project requests. However, it currently has only $1 million
to give each year. This work must be supported and fully resourced.
In addition, mainstream institutions must be transformed to make gender concerns
integral parts of their policies, programmes and practices. Too often gender is
included in the programme prologue or policy statement and ignored in mechanisms
of implementation or monitoring of results. Women have recognized that if you
want to see how governments are implementing their commitments to women, follow
the money and make the money work. UNIFEM is working in over 30 countries to
support national and local initiatives to include gender perspectives in
budgeting processes, and to collect and use sex-disaggregated data in public
policy formulation. Our programmes show that change can happenbut it takes
money as well as commitment.
Finally, strengthening the institutional architecture of gender equality within
the multilateral system means investing in a stronger institutional advocate for
gender. It is not just a matter of placing gender experts within these
institutions. Increasing gender expertise or other technical measures cannot in
itself replace a lack of political will or authority to close the implementation
gap. We know what works but without a strong gender advocate with sufficient
status, authority and resources, this knowledge and expertise will not be used.
This is a waste that we cannot afford.
Women cannot wait another 30 years. In September, the worldıs governments will
meet to review progress towards the Millennium Development
Goals, adopted at the Millennium Summit in 2000. The Millennium Declaration
makes clear that gender equality is important not only as a goal in
itself, but for achieving all the other goals. If we are to find sustainable
solutions to the challenges identified in the Declaration, including both human
development and human security, the worldıs women one half of its population
must be empowered to contribute their knowledge and insights to the process.
It has taken 30 years to get this far. We must now urgently move forward on
implementation, accountability and adequate resources to bring about a world in
which people live lives that are free of want and free of fear. We owe this to
the next generation.
Media Contact: Leigh Pasqual,
leigh.pasqual@undp.org, 212-906 5463