STATEMENT
OF THE LINKAGE CAUCUS AT THE 49TH SESSION OF THE COMMISSION ON THE
STATUS OF WOMEN
The Linkage
Caucus represents a diverse group of NGOs from all regions of the
world gathered at the 49th Session of the Commission on the Status
of Women.
As long-standing
supporters of and advocates for the United Nations and the multilateral
system, we believe that the UN Member States and the UN leadership
need to take strong action to advance gender equality within the UN
system and to make the promotion and realization of women's empowerment
and human rights a priority.
Based
on the discussion at this 49th Session of the CSW reviewing implementation
of the Beijing Platform for Action, we note that the UN system needs
both more effective, results-driven gender mainstreaming, and effective,
adequately resourced women's units to bring us closer to
implementing the Beijing Platform, to achieving the Millennium Development
Goals, to ending the pandemic of violence against women, and to reflecting
the UN's unequivocal commitment to the world's women in all their
diversity.
In this
regard, we would like to emphasize the need to upgrade and better
resource the gender architecture and its related mechanisms within
the UN. The UN system must elevate gender equality to its appropriate
place within its own organizational chart. The status of the personnel
and funding of the units that work on women's issues within the UN
should reflect the high priority that the system says it places on
gender equality. Women's participation and equality is essential to
meeting the Millennium Development Goals, as well as to fulfilling
the myriad other commitments the UN has made to combating gender inequality
and discrimination.
Over
the past two decades, Member states have steadily expanded the mandates
and expectations that they put on UNIFEM and the Division for the
Advancement of Women in particular. Furthermore, the status of the
personnel charged with the advancement of women must be raised to
the level of others dealing with equivalent concerns.
In additions,
it is urgent that the low percentage of women in high level posts
within the UN be addressed. There is currently no Under Secretary-General
dedicated to and only one Assistant Secretary-General working on gender
issues. Thirty years after the first International Women's Year Conference,
it is shocking that only a handful of approximately sixty Secretary
Generals Special Representative(SRSGs)s and Deputy Special Representatives
are women. This and the lack of progress in appointing women heads
of agencies underscores the problems with
implementation if gender equality policies within the UN system.
The UN
should be setting an example for gender balance and assisting Member
States in achieving the BPFA goal of at least 30% women in decision-making
positionsa goal which is far from being realized one decade
later. Furthermore, we note with concern that there are only 11 women
ambassadors at the UN and that Member States have been slow to put
forward women candidates for SRSGs and heads of UN agencies.
A clear
commitment on the part of Member States to nominate and the SG to
appoint more women to leadership positions would show strong commitment
in the area of gender equality.
We hope
that in the context of UN reform Member States and the UN leadership
will propose and implement structural changes that would have a real
impact on the work of the United Nations on gender equality as well
as serve as a model for Member States.
The time
to act is now.
March
9, 2005
New York, NY, USA