ARROW statement at the high-level thematic debate advancing gender equality

Delivered by ARROW Executive Director Sivananthi Thanenthiran

Your excellency, Mr Sam Kutesa, President of the General Assembly;

Your excellencies, the Presidents of Liberia and Turkey;

Madam Phumzile, Executive Director of UN Women;

Madam Helen Clark, Administrator, UNDP;

Excellencies, distinguished speakers and honourable members and delegates

I am deeply honoured to be invited to speak to this assembly on the issues I am passionate about and the organisation that I work for – the Asian-Pacific Resource and Research Centre for Women (ARROW) has been championing for the past 21 years.

I consider myself to be privileged to work alongside women’s rights activists,who everyday, go out and do their best, and even do battle – simply because we believe that we as women are equal human beings, and equal citizens, and endowed with equal rights before the law.

All that I as a woman enjoy today, were hard-won, by women before me and I acknowledge their work, their sacrifices and their dedication.

I also acknowledge past leaders on the world stage who were present at the United Nations, and though coming from different contexts were able to work together and forge a vision for the world which continues to be inspirational even today. They presented us with the 1993 Vienna Declaration, the 1994 Cairo Consensus and the 1995 Beijing Platform for Action. It is of course our deepest hope that these are the inspiring standards that member states in the United Nations will continue to adhere to, and be able to forge ahead to greater inclusivity, equality, justice, peace and sustainability.

You who are present here have the same great opportunity, as the leaders in that generation, to present a post-2015 development framework which will inspire generations to come. If you think that the world is indeed a broken place, through this process, you are able to put in place solutions which you think will be able to build the world we want.

Indeed more girls are in school, more women are in university, in Parliament and in the workforce; yet, substantive gender equality still remains a distant dream for most women and girls. The dream is most distant for those women who are poor, lesser educated, live in rural and hard-to-reach areas, and belong to marginalised groups. These women still form the majority of women in the world today. These are the women we should aim – never to leave behind – in the next 20 years.

But despite the chaos of the world we live in, through my work, I have always been able to witness how women and girls continue to creatively imagine their futures.

Let me share with you one such story which comes from our partner the Asian Rural Women’s Coalition. Thirteen-year-old Lina lives in a place of abject poverty- in the rural village of Desa Tegalampel in East Java. Her father is a landless agricultural labourer. Lina’s dreams were almost shattered when one day her mother suggested that she should be married in order to live a more comfortable life. “It’s poverty that makes people want to quickly marry off their children so they no longer need be responsible for them,” Lina told us. Her own mother was married at the age of 11, and had Lina when she was just 12 years old. Lina wanted to break the chains of this tradition. She felt that if she had an education, there would be better life opportunities for her. Lina also chanced upon a CSO led reproductive health education programme where she learned about reproductive health and rights as a teenager. It was from that programme that she learned that it was her right to decide when she would get married. After convincing her parents to call off her marriage, inspired by the experience, Lina and her friends created a youth community campaign against early marriages to empower other girls in the community. They call it langit biru which means ‘blue skies’ because it symbolises hope.

Despite 20 years of implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action, isn’t it a travesty we continue to live in a world where girls are prohibited from going to schools – some are abducted, even killed, for seeking an education. Women and girls form the majority of  the one billion who are hungry and malnourished because they not only lack access to productive resources, but because culturally, they eat last in the house when there is already very little food in poorer households. Poverty and hunger results in nutritional deficiency and results in anaemia, wasting and stunting. This has long-term effects on the overall well-being and health of women and girls – it is estimated that half of all pregnant women worldwide suffer from iron deficiency anaemia. Anaemia is one of the contributing reasons for high maternal mortality. Nutritional deficiency limits girls from fully realising their potential and impacts educational, health, and social attainments.

Women are also unequally impacted by the effects of climate change and are on the frontlines in coastal communities, on sparse agricultural lands, where water and other natural resources are dwindling because they are, of course, the natural resource managers for their households and their families. Climate change exarcebates existing gender inequalities and girls and women are at increased risk for dropping out of schools, violence including sexual violence, exhaustion and ill-health due to the impact of climate change.

In recent times we have also witnessed the unparalleled rise of religious fundamentalism and extremism in all parts of the world. This has led to attempts to roll back significant policy successes in women’s rights both at the national level, as well as the international level where governments cite religious and cultural traditions in order to curb the realization of equality for women. This is a relatively new phenomenon. Because twenty years ago, when all member states agreed to Beijing, to Cairo and to Vienna, we were all still belonging to different faiths, different religions and different cultures. But twenty years later, women’s rights and human rights have suddenly become incompatible with our faiths and cultures. Moreover in many of these fundamentalist contexts, women’s human rights defenders, who remain critical to protecting and preserving human rights, are vulnerable to extreme violence and sadly – even death. Safety and equal access to justice must be ensured for women’s human rights defenders.

In recent months we have experienced that it is becoming difficult to discuss issues of human rights, especially of sexual and reproductive health and rights – because these topics have become divisive and troublesome to handle during inter-governmental meetings. Clearly some special interest groups have that luxury of dismissing these troublesome realities of women. We, on the other hand, do not have this luxury. Our NGO partners report that: in Pakistan, 75% of women living in rural areas deliver at home and do not have access to emergency obstetric care. In Mongolia, 75% of maternal deaths occur among nomadic herders, unregistered migrants and unemployed women. In India, 92 women are raped every day and 1 in every 4 married women experience physical or sexual violence by their husbands. In Nepal, 27% of married women have an unmet need for contraception. In Bangladesh 128 out of 1000 adolescent girls give birth. We need each and everyone of you to be able to stand up for the rights of women and girls not only in your countries but for all women and girls across the globe. We cannot do this without your support.

We must be cognisant of the fact that sexual and reproductive health and rights are inextricable from economic, socio-cultural and political rights and must be recognized as necessary ingredients to achieving gender equality, women’s empowerment and sustainable development. Without autonomy over our bodies, we cannot achieve autonomy over our lives.

Every individual must have the right to decide whom we can love, whom we can have consensual relations with and when, and whom we can enter into marriage with and when.

We must have the right to decide how many children to have if at all, when to have them and how frequently.

We must have the right to a life free from all forms of discrimination and violence regardless of sexual orientation and gender identity.

These are indeed challenging times for all of us. But challenging times require us to be bold and to be able to vision a future beyond the current turmoil. It requires all of us to rise out of our comfort zones, and commit to forging a path for the future. In all recent post-2015 negotiations member states have constantly come forward to say that they are looking for a transformative agenda; an agenda which will be able to harness these challenges and yet deliver development solutions to the issues we see proliferating our landscape. How will transformation occur if we are not able to discuss and traverse difficult issues? How will transformation happen, if we sink down to the lowest common denominators, rather than aspire to the highest ideals? How will transformation take place if we are not able to identify a comprehensive set of actionable indicators which is able to translate the hopes for a visionary agenda into reality?

We, too, as women’s rights organisations share your desire for a transformative agenda. For us to address these challenges adequately we must be able to bring not only economic change but also social and cultural change to the societies we live in. We must be able to expand our minds and our hearts to include the most marginalised populations into our vision.

A country’s sustainable development indicators are best reflected in how it takes care of its most marginalised communities and is able to include all key stakeholders, especially those with critical voices. We call upon all governments to join us in our efforts for creating a just, equal and equitable world which takes into consideration the needs of all its constituencies and values all people. We need a development justice model that will deliver sustainable, just and equitable development.

You and I may not personally benefit from this but we will know that we have done our utmost best to leave behind a better world, a more equal world for future generations.

Thank you.

Vietnam

  • Centre for Creative Initiatives in Health and Population (CCIHP)

Indonesia

  • Aliansi Satu Visi (ASV);
  • CEDAW Working Group;
  • Hollaback! Jakarta;
  • Institut Kapal Perempuan;
  • Kalyanamitra;
  • Komnas Perempuan;
  • Remaja Independen Papua/Independent Youth
    Forum Papua (FRIP/IYFP);
  • Perkumpulan Keluarga Berencana Indonesia (PKBI);
  • Perkumpulan Lintas Feminis Jakarta;
  • Perkumpulan Pamflet Generasi;
  • RUTGERS Indonesia;
  • Sanggar SWARA;
  • Women on Web;
  • Yayasan Kesehatan Perempuan (YKP); 
  • YIFOS Indonesia

Maldives

  • Hope for Women
  • Society for Health Education (SHE)
ARROW statement at the high-level thematic debate advancing gender equality

Delivered by ARROW Executive Director Sivananthi Thanenthiran

Your excellency, Mr Sam Kutesa, President of the General Assembly;

Your excellencies, the Presidents of Liberia and Turkey;

Madam Phumzile, Executive Director of UN Women;

Madam Helen Clark, Administrator, UNDP;

Excellencies, distinguished speakers and honourable members and delegates

I am deeply honoured to be invited to speak to this assembly on the issues I am passionate about and the organisation that I work for – the Asian-Pacific Resource and Research Centre for Women (ARROW) has been championing for the past 21 years.

I consider myself to be privileged to work alongside women’s rights activists,who everyday, go out and do their best, and even do battle – simply because we believe that we as women are equal human beings, and equal citizens, and endowed with equal rights before the law.

All that I as a woman enjoy today, were hard-won, by women before me and I acknowledge their work, their sacrifices and their dedication.

I also acknowledge past leaders on the world stage who were present at the United Nations, and though coming from different contexts were able to work together and forge a vision for the world which continues to be inspirational even today. They presented us with the 1993 Vienna Declaration, the 1994 Cairo Consensus and the 1995 Beijing Platform for Action. It is of course our deepest hope that these are the inspiring standards that member states in the United Nations will continue to adhere to, and be able to forge ahead to greater inclusivity, equality, justice, peace and sustainability.

You who are present here have the same great opportunity, as the leaders in that generation, to present a post-2015 development framework which will inspire generations to come. If you think that the world is indeed a broken place, through this process, you are able to put in place solutions which you think will be able to build the world we want.

Indeed more girls are in school, more women are in university, in Parliament and in the workforce; yet, substantive gender equality still remains a distant dream for most women and girls. The dream is most distant for those women who are poor, lesser educated, live in rural and hard-to-reach areas, and belong to marginalised groups. These women still form the majority of women in the world today. These are the women we should aim – never to leave behind – in the next 20 years.

But despite the chaos of the world we live in, through my work, I have always been able to witness how women and girls continue to creatively imagine their futures.

Let me share with you one such story which comes from our partner the Asian Rural Women’s Coalition. Thirteen-year-old Lina lives in a place of abject poverty- in the rural village of Desa Tegalampel in East Java. Her father is a landless agricultural labourer. Lina’s dreams were almost shattered when one day her mother suggested that she should be married in order to live a more comfortable life. “It’s poverty that makes people want to quickly marry off their children so they no longer need be responsible for them,” Lina told us. Her own mother was married at the age of 11, and had Lina when she was just 12 years old. Lina wanted to break the chains of this tradition. She felt that if she had an education, there would be better life opportunities for her. Lina also chanced upon a CSO led reproductive health education programme where she learned about reproductive health and rights as a teenager. It was from that programme that she learned that it was her right to decide when she would get married. After convincing her parents to call off her marriage, inspired by the experience, Lina and her friends created a youth community campaign against early marriages to empower other girls in the community. They call it langit biru which means ‘blue skies’ because it symbolises hope.

Despite 20 years of implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action, isn’t it a travesty we continue to live in a world where girls are prohibited from going to schools – some are abducted, even killed, for seeking an education. Women and girls form the majority of  the one billion who are hungry and malnourished because they not only lack access to productive resources, but because culturally, they eat last in the house when there is already very little food in poorer households. Poverty and hunger results in nutritional deficiency and results in anaemia, wasting and stunting. This has long-term effects on the overall well-being and health of women and girls – it is estimated that half of all pregnant women worldwide suffer from iron deficiency anaemia. Anaemia is one of the contributing reasons for high maternal mortality. Nutritional deficiency limits girls from fully realising their potential and impacts educational, health, and social attainments.

Women are also unequally impacted by the effects of climate change and are on the frontlines in coastal communities, on sparse agricultural lands, where water and other natural resources are dwindling because they are, of course, the natural resource managers for their households and their families. Climate change exarcebates existing gender inequalities and girls and women are at increased risk for dropping out of schools, violence including sexual violence, exhaustion and ill-health due to the impact of climate change.

In recent times we have also witnessed the unparalleled rise of religious fundamentalism and extremism in all parts of the world. This has led to attempts to roll back significant policy successes in women’s rights both at the national level, as well as the international level where governments cite religious and cultural traditions in order to curb the realization of equality for women. This is a relatively new phenomenon. Because twenty years ago, when all member states agreed to Beijing, to Cairo and to Vienna, we were all still belonging to different faiths, different religions and different cultures. But twenty years later, women’s rights and human rights have suddenly become incompatible with our faiths and cultures. Moreover in many of these fundamentalist contexts, women’s human rights defenders, who remain critical to protecting and preserving human rights, are vulnerable to extreme violence and sadly – even death. Safety and equal access to justice must be ensured for women’s human rights defenders.

In recent months we have experienced that it is becoming difficult to discuss issues of human rights, especially of sexual and reproductive health and rights – because these topics have become divisive and troublesome to handle during inter-governmental meetings. Clearly some special interest groups have that luxury of dismissing these troublesome realities of women. We, on the other hand, do not have this luxury. Our NGO partners report that: in Pakistan, 75% of women living in rural areas deliver at home and do not have access to emergency obstetric care. In Mongolia, 75% of maternal deaths occur among nomadic herders, unregistered migrants and unemployed women. In India, 92 women are raped every day and 1 in every 4 married women experience physical or sexual violence by their husbands. In Nepal, 27% of married women have an unmet need for contraception. In Bangladesh 128 out of 1000 adolescent girls give birth. We need each and everyone of you to be able to stand up for the rights of women and girls not only in your countries but for all women and girls across the globe. We cannot do this without your support.

We must be cognisant of the fact that sexual and reproductive health and rights are inextricable from economic, socio-cultural and political rights and must be recognized as necessary ingredients to achieving gender equality, women’s empowerment and sustainable development. Without autonomy over our bodies, we cannot achieve autonomy over our lives.

Every individual must have the right to decide whom we can love, whom we can have consensual relations with and when, and whom we can enter into marriage with and when.

We must have the right to decide how many children to have if at all, when to have them and how frequently.

We must have the right to a life free from all forms of discrimination and violence regardless of sexual orientation and gender identity.

These are indeed challenging times for all of us. But challenging times require us to be bold and to be able to vision a future beyond the current turmoil. It requires all of us to rise out of our comfort zones, and commit to forging a path for the future. In all recent post-2015 negotiations member states have constantly come forward to say that they are looking for a transformative agenda; an agenda which will be able to harness these challenges and yet deliver development solutions to the issues we see proliferating our landscape. How will transformation occur if we are not able to discuss and traverse difficult issues? How will transformation happen, if we sink down to the lowest common denominators, rather than aspire to the highest ideals? How will transformation take place if we are not able to identify a comprehensive set of actionable indicators which is able to translate the hopes for a visionary agenda into reality?

We, too, as women’s rights organisations share your desire for a transformative agenda. For us to address these challenges adequately we must be able to bring not only economic change but also social and cultural change to the societies we live in. We must be able to expand our minds and our hearts to include the most marginalised populations into our vision.

A country’s sustainable development indicators are best reflected in how it takes care of its most marginalised communities and is able to include all key stakeholders, especially those with critical voices. We call upon all governments to join us in our efforts for creating a just, equal and equitable world which takes into consideration the needs of all its constituencies and values all people. We need a development justice model that will deliver sustainable, just and equitable development.

You and I may not personally benefit from this but we will know that we have done our utmost best to leave behind a better world, a more equal world for future generations.

Thank you.

Morocco

  • Association Marocaine de Planification Familiale (AMPF),
  • Morocco Family Planning Association

India

  • CommonHealth;
  • Love Matters India;
  • Pravah;
  • Rural Women’s Social Education Centre (RUWSEC);
  • SAHAYOG;
  • Sahaj;
  • Sahiyo;
  • SAMA – Resource Group for Women and Health;
  • WeSpeakOut;
  • The YP Foundation (TYPF)

Lao PDR

  • Lao Women’s Union;
  • The Faculty of Postgraduate Studies at the University of Health
    Sciences (UHS)

Sri Lanka

  • Bakamoono;
  • Women and Media Collective (WMC),
  • Youth Advocacy Network – Sri Lanka (YANSL)

Malaysia

  • Federation of Reproductive Health Associations of Malaysia (FRHAM);
  • Joint Action Group for Gender Equality (JAG);
  • Justice for Sisters (JFS);
  • Reproductive Health Association of
    Kelantan (ReHAK);
  • Reproductive Rights Advocacy Alliance Malaysia (RRAAM);
  • Sisters in Islam (SIS)

Maldives

  • Hope for Women;
  • Society for Health Education (SHE)

Myanmar

  • Colourful Girls Organization;
  • Green Lotus Myanmar

Nepal

  • Beyond Beijing Committee (BBC);
  • Blind Youth Association of Nepal;
  • Blue Diamond Society (BDS);
  • Nepalese Youth for Climate Action (NYCA);
  • Visible Impact;
  • Women’s Rehabilitation Centre (WOREC);
  • YPEER Nepal;
  • YUWA

Pakistan

  • Aahung, Centre for Social Policy Development (CSPD);
  • Forum for Dignity Initiative (FDI);
  • Gravity Development Organization; Green Circle Organization;
  • Indus Resources Center (IRC);
  • Idara-e-Taleem-O-Aaghai (ITA);
  • Rehnuma – Family Planning Association Pakistan;
  • Shelter
    Participatory Organisation;
  • Shirkat Gah;
  • The Enlight Lab

Philippines

  • Democratic Socalist Women of the Philippines (DSWP);
  • Galang;
  • Healthcare Without Harm;
  • Institute for Climate and Sustainable Cities;
  • Likhaan Centre for Women’s Health;
  • Nisa UI Haqq Fi Bangsamoro;
  • PATH Foundation Inc. (PFPI);
  • Women’s Global Network for
    Reproductive Rights (WGNRR)

Singapore

  • End Female Genital Cutting Singapore
  • Reproductive Rights (WGNRR)

Mongolia

  • MONFEMNET National Network