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..Press
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UNESCAP News Services
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Date 13
June 2005
Press Release No: L/22/2005
WOMEN IN DRY LANDS RANK AMONG ‘POOREST
OF POOR’, UN SECRETARY-GENERAL SAYS
IN DESERTIFICATION DAY MESSAGE
Following is the text of the message by UN Secretary-General
Kofi Annan for the World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought,
17 June 2005:
Desertification is one of the world’s most
alarming processes of environmental degradation. It threatens
the health and livelihoods of more than one billion people.
And each year, desertification and drought cause an estimated
$42 billion in lost agricultural production. The great scope
and urgency of this challenge led the United Nations General
Assembly to proclaim 2006 to be the International Year of Deserts
and Desertification.
The theme of this year’s observance of World
Day to Combat Desertification and Drought is “Women and
Desertification”. In many of the world’s dry, agricultural
areas, including much of Africa, it is traditionally women who
devote time and effort to the land. In developing countries,
women account for approximately 70 per cent of the agricultural
labour force and produce 60 to 80 per cent of the food. It is
primarily they who process, manage and market food for their
families and societies, and who work directly with natural resources.
And it is they who, having seen environmental degradation and
other problems close at hand, have acquired valuable knowledge.
Despite such efforts and knowledge, women living
in dry lands tend to rank among the poorest of the poor, with
little power to bring about real change. The United Nations
Convention on Desertification and Drought underlines the important
role played by women in ensuring implementation of the Convention.
Yet, with ownership and decision-making over land and livestock
remaining predominantly in the male domain, women are often
excluded from participation in land conservation and development
projects, from agricultural extension work, and from the overall
policy-making process.
There are some signs of progress. In many countries,
women are beginning to gain access to land ownership and to
take part in decision-making. Increasingly, Member States are
recognizing that a lack of financial resources is impeding efforts
by women and men to combat desertification. This is giving women
new opportunities to change their lives, societies and environments.
On this World Day to Combat Desertification and Drought, let
us all pledge to do our part in empowering women and engaging
them as full partners in global efforts to address this vital
challenge.
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