WOMEN’s rights are human rights. But, in these troubled times, the rights of women and girls are being reduced, restricted and reversed.
Empowering women and girls is the only way to protect their rights and make sure they realise their potential.
Historic imbalances in power relations between men and women are leading to greater discrimination against women and girls. Around the world, tradition, cultural values and religion are being misused to curtail women’s rights, to entrench sexism and defend misogynistic practices.
Women’s legal rights, which have never been equal to men’s in any continent, are being eroded further. Women’s rights over their own bodies are questioned and undermined.
Women are targeted for intimidation and harassment in cyberspace and in real life. In the worst cases, extremists and terrorists build their ideologies around the subjugation of women and girls and single them out for sexual and gender-based violence, forced marriage and virtual enslavement.
Despite improvements, leadership positions across the board are still held by men, and the economic gender gap is widening. We must change this, by empowering women, enabling their voices to be heard and giving them control of their lives and over the future of our world.
Denying the rights of women and girls has a serious social and economic impact that holds us back. Gender equality has a transformative effect that is essential to fully functioning communities, societies and economies.
Women’s access to education and health services has benefits for their families and communities, and extend to future generations.
An extra year in school can add up to 25 per cent to a girl’s future income.
When women participate fully in the labour force, it creates opportunities and generates growth. Closing the gender gap in employment could add US$12 trillion (RM53 trillion) to global gross domestic product by 2025. Increasing the proportion of women in public institutions benefits entire societies.
Gender equality is central to the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development, the global plan agreed by leaders of all countries to meet the challenges we face. Sustainable Development Goal 5 calls for gender equality and the empowerment of all women and girls, and this is central to the achievement of the 17 SDGs.
I am committed to increasing women’s participation in our peace and security work. At the United Nations, I am establishing a roadmap with benchmarks to achieve gender parity across the system, so that our organisation represents the people we serve. Previous targets have not been met.
Now we must move from ambition to action. On International Women’s Day, let us pledge to overcome prejudice, support engagement and activism, and promote gender equality and women’s empowerment.
ANTÓNIO GUTERRES, United Nations secretary-general