Panafrican News Agency

Guterres says COVID-19 has exposed endemic gender inequality

Ne York, US (PAA) - The COVID-19 pandemic is having a devastating impact on women and girls, and the fallout has shown how deeply gender inequality remains embedded in the world’s political, social and economic systems, UN chief António Guterres said in his address to the Commission on gthe Status of Women, on Monday. 

This year’s Commission will focus on charting a global roadmap towards achieving full equality in public life but, as Mr. Guterres recalled in his speech, gender equality in all walks of life is a long way off and has been further undermined by the pandemic.

“The damage is incalculable and will resound down the decades, into future generations,” warned the UN chief.

A UN statement said he noted that women make up most of the jobs that have been hardest hit by the pandemic, are far more likely than men to lose work, and that women’s and girls’ unpaid care work has risen dramatically owing to factors such as stay-at-home orders, the closure of schools and childcare facilities, and an increased need for elder care.

Yet dramatically improving the gender balance would not only benefit women, but the economy at large, said the UN chief, pointing to evidence showing that women’s participation enhances economic results, prompts greater investment in social protection, leads to more sustainable peace and advances climate action.

“Women’s equal participation,” he said, “is the game-changer we need”.

Mr. Guterres paid tribute to women’s leadership in the response to the pandemic, a major factor in efforts to keep transmission rates low and put countries back on the road to recovery, whilst women’s organizations have filled crucial gaps in the provision of services and information.

He said women are at the centre of the UN’s COVID-19 response and recovery – pushing for stimulus packages that support the informal economy, invest in the care economy and target women entrepreneurs – and working with governments to address a surge in violence against women.

The Secretary-General underlined the continued male domination in public life, and why it is so important for women to be involved in decision-making processes.

“When women are missing from decision-making, we see the world through only one perspective,” he said. “We create economic models that fail to measure the productive work that occurs in the home.”

Mr. Guterres detailed the changes being made at the UN to transform the gender balance at the Organization. These include bringing more women into senior leadership positions, reaching gender parity at the senior management levels, and striving to ensure women’s participation in peacekeeping, mediation and peacebuilding processes. 

“We need to move beyond fixing women,” he declared, “and instead fix our systems. Pandemic recovery is our chance to chart a path to an equal future”.

-0- PANA MA 16March2021