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| Female politicians at a meeting of law makers from Arab states and members of the European parliament in November 2014 |
10 March 2015 – ‘Women in Politics’ 2015 Map launched at United
Nations headquarters today reveals the “snail’s pace of progress” on
gender equality and women’s participation in public and political life,
prompting representatives of the UN and the Inter-parliamentary Union
(IPU) to warn that such slow advancement will severely check the new
global development agenda due to be adopted later this year.
“If today’s leaders front-load gender equality, if they start now to
make good on those 20-year-old promises, we can look forward to gender
equality by 2030 at the latest,” said Executive Director of UN Women
Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka as she called for renewed commitments and
investments to meet the Beijing Platform for Action’s target of gender balance set back in 1995.
UN Women, created in 2010 under the leadership of the UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-moon, together with the Inter Parliamentary Union (IPU) today jointly launched this year’s Women in Politics: 2015 Map at United Nations headquarters in both Geneva and in New York.
The Map’s findings presented a mixed picture gleaned from data and
global rankings for women in politics showed more countries than ever
before (48) have 30 per cent or more women members in at least one
parliamentary chamber, up from 46 in 2014 and 42 in 2013.
“The global average for women MPs also reached its highest ever level to
above 22 percent,” UN Women and IPU said in a joint press release.
“However, that growth was a disappointing 0.3 percentage points and
followed the record level of increase (1.5 points) during 2013,
suggesting that the impact of quotas was wearing off.”
According to the Map, the Americas maintains its lead as the region with
the highest average of women MPs at 26.4 per cent with Bolivia the
highest placed country from the region ranking No.2 in the world with
53.1 per cent
However this is not yet satisfactory because we need to see more women than men in parliament if ever that is going to be possible ..It seems the individuals who are fighting for women rights in Africa and in any other continent are doing a very great job and they really deserve a reward for that..The causes of low participation of women in parliament should be carefully analyzed and possible remedies to increase their participation should be developed.
In contrast, the Pacific remains the region with the lowest average of women MPs.
At political leadership level, overall progress was noted as more encouraging.
The number of women Heads of State and/or Government in the world
regained a previous peak of 19, it said, and women account for 15.8 per
cent of all Speakers of Parliament, an increase of one full percentage
point during 2014.
Although the number of women government ministers grew from 670 to 715
in the 12 months since 1 January 2014, the map showed that figure
represents only 17.7 per cent of all government ministers in the world.
Since 2005, the percentage of women ministers has only increased by 3.5
points.
Thirty countries currently have 30 percent or more women ministers with
Finland, Cabo Verde, Sweden, France and Liechtenstein occupying the top
five places. Although this figure has dropped from 36 countries in 2014,
there are now only eight countries with no women in government: Bosnia
Herzegovina, Brunei, Hungary, Pakistan, Saudi Arabia, Slovakia, Tonga
and Vanuatu.
The countries that saw the largest decreases between 2014 and 2015 were
Peru, Malawi, Denmark, Belgium and Paraguay, with losses ranging from
two to six women ministers.
“The snail’s pace of progress on gender equality and women’s
participation in public and political life will need to be tackled
head-on” for the overall success of the new sustainable development
agenda taking over from the Millennium Development Goals this year,”
according to the joint UN Women-IPU press release.

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