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..Press
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UNESCAP News Services
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Date 7
March 2005
Press Release No: L/08/2005
THE UNITED NATIONS SECRETARY-GENERAL
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MESSAGE ON INTERNATIONAL WOMEN’S DAY
8 March 2005
This year marks a milestone in the movement for
gender equality and the advancement of women -- the ten-year
review of the Beijing Conference and Platform for Action. In
1995, women gathered in Beijing and took a giant step forward
on behalf of humankind. As a result, the world recognized explicitly,
as never before, that gender equality is critical to the development
and peace of every nation. Ten years on, women are not only
more aware of their rights; they are more able to exercise them.
Over this decade, we have seen tangible progress
on many fronts. Life expectancy and fertility rates have improved.
More girls are enrolled in primary education. More women are
earning an income than ever before. At the same time, new challenges
have emerged. Consider the trafficking of women and children
– an odious but increasingly common practice. Or the increasing
targeting of women in armed conflict. Or the terrifying growth
of HIV/AIDS among women – especially young women.
Yet as we look back on the past decade, one thing
stands out above all else: we have learnt that the challenges
facing women are not problems without solutions. We have learnt
what works and what doesn’t. If we are to change the historical
legacy that puts women at a disadvantage in most societies,
we must implement what we have learnt on a larger scale. We
must take specific, targeted action in a number of areas.
This year offers a precious opportunity for doing
that, as the world’s leaders prepare to gather for a summit
at the United Nations in September to review progress in implementing
the Millennium Declaration, agreed in 2000 by all the world’s
Governments as a blueprint for building a better world in the
21st century. As part of that process, I would urge the international
community to remember that promoting gender equality is not
only women’s responsibility – it is the responsibility
of all of us.
Sixty years have passed since the founders of
the United Nations inscribed, on the first page of our Charter,
the equal rights of women and men. Since then, study after study
has taught us that there is no tool for development more effective
than the empowerment of women. No other policy is as likely
to raise economic productivity, or to reduce infant and maternal
mortality. No other policy is as sure to improve nutrition and
promote health -- including the prevention of HIV/AIDS. No other
policy is as powerful in increasing the chances of education
for the next generation. And I would venture that no policy
is more important in preventing conflict, or in achieving reconciliation
after a conflict has ended.
Whatever the very real benefits of investing in
women, the most important fact remains: women themselves have
the right to live in dignity, in freedom from want and freedom
from fear. On this International Women’s Day, let us rededicate
ourselves to making that a reality.
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