New Report Calls for World Leaders to
End Discrimination and Live Up to Promises Made to World’s
Women and Girls
SANA’A, 15 October 2005—Global
efforts to “make poverty history” will fail unless
world leaders act now to end gender discrimination, according
to The State of World Population 2005 report, released today
by UNFPA Yemen.
The report, “The Promise of Equality:
Gender Equity, Reproductive Health and the Millennium Development
Goals”, calls upon world leaders to fulfill promises
made to the world’s women and young people in order
to meet poverty reduction goals agreed to at the 2000 Millennium
Summit and reaffirmed by last month’s World Summit in
New York. Investing in women and young people—who constitute
the majority of the world’s population—will accelerate
long-term development. Failure to do so may entrench poverty
for generations to come.
“We will not make poverty history until
we make gender discrimination history”, said UNFPA Representative
Hans Obdeijn during the launching of the report today. “We
cannot make poverty history until we stop violence against
women and girls. We cannot make poverty history until women
enjoy their full social, cultural, economic and political
rights.”
The Minister of Public Health and Population,
Deputy Chairman, Prof. Mohammed A –Noami, said, in line
with the report: “Yemen is committed to engaging women
the development of our country. Investing in women and girls
makes sound economic and social sense. This is because discrimination
leads to lower productivity and higher health costs. It also
results in higher death rates among mothers and children and
significantly threatens efforts to reduce poverty”
Nevertheless, despite new laws and programmes
to improve the condition of impoverished women, the pace of
change is far too slow. Intimately associated with poverty
is lack of access to family planning and reproductive health.
While Yemen is working to close gender gaps in education and
improve health-care access for women and adolescents, statistics
continue to tell a troubling tale.
Today, the population of Yemen at almost 20
million and is expected to reach approximately 45 million
in 2050. This projection is predicated on whether men and
women will continue to have the means to decide when and how
often to have children.
The biggest threat to the lives of women between
the ages of 15-45 in Yemen is pregnancy and childbirth. Every
year 365 per 100.00 women die in Yemen from pregnancy-related
causes. These deaths are preventable if access to reproductive
health services and modern contraceptives are more widely
available in rural as well and urban areas.
Investing in political, economic and educational
opportunities for women and girls, on the other hand, yields
quick wins and high pay-offs that lead to improved economic
prospects, smaller families, healthier and more literate children,
lower HIV prevalence rates and reduced incidence of harmful
traditional practices. Furthermore, studies show that when
women control the family purse strings, they are more likely
than men to invest a higher percentage of their earnings in
family needs.
Reaching the gender equity goal requires men’s
involvement. UNFPA’s work in the field shows that men
are valuable allies in striving for changed practices, while
seeking to increase men’s understanding and participatory
role in promoting gender equity, equality and women empowerment.
Increasingly, governments in the Arab region
have proceeded to redefine national population and development
policies and strategies in light of the goals articulated
in the ICPD (International Conference on Population and Development
in Cairo 1994) and the Millennium Development Goals. These
goals provide challenges and opportunities for governments,
as they incorporate strategies on reproductive health, gender
equality and poverty reduction into national policies.
“And I can assure you that women all
over the world are tired of promises, promises, promises,”
said Ms. Thoraya Obaid, the Executive Director of UNFPA, at
the launching of the Report in London. “The time has
come; we have the means, we have the commitment. Now we need
action.”
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UNFPA is an international development agency that promotes
the right of every woman, man and child to enjoy a life of
health and equal opportunity. UNFPA supports countries in
using population data for policies and programmes to reduce
poverty and to ensure that every pregnancy is wanted, every
birth is safe, every young person is free of HIV/AIDS, and
every girl and woman is treated with dignity and respect.