Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, who was South Africa's first female deputy president, said that 18 years after world leaders adopted a blueprint to achieve equality for women at a UN conference in Beijing there are still major economic and social barriers and new crimes to confront including trafficking of women and girls and cyber bullying.
"All of those means that we do need to go back to the drawing boards and strengthen the mechanisms and options that we have to engage in the fight to advance women's equality and emancipation," she said in an interview Wednesday.
"You need men, you just cannot crack these issues without winning over men," she said. "We need to win the priests, the rabbis, the traditional chiefs" to tackle religious and cultural barriers.
UN Women was created three years ago by the General Assembly to combine four UN bodies dealing with the advancement of women under a single umbrella. Its first leader, former Chilean president Michelle Bachelet, stepped down to run for president again.
Bachelet's greatest success came in March when 131 conservative Muslim and Roman Catholic countries and liberal Western nations approved a UN blueprint to combat violence against women and girls. Data from the World Health Organization and other research has shown that an average of 40 per cent and up to 70 per cent of women in some countries, face violence in their lifetimes.
Ending violence against women and girls remains a top priority for UN Women, and Mlambo-Ngcuka said she wants to take this campaign to every city in the world and mobilise local governments, non-governmental organizations, religious leaders and interested citizens to fight the scourge and create safe communities.
"Women's voices need to be heard in the household, on corporate boards, in peace talks, and in public institutions," Mlambo-Ngcuka told a news conference yesterday.
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