Harriet Harman, Minister for Women and Equality, today hosted an unprecedented meeting of women Ambassadors to agree how to work together to improve women’s lives, and to work to support the establishment of a new UN agency for women.
This is the first time such a meeting of women Ambassadors to London has been held. Up to 30 senior diplomats, including 13 Ambassadors, attended, representing some 26 countries.
Ms Harman said: ‘There are now women ministers and diplomats in every continent and in most countries, and that is a trend which is only set to continue. This offers the prospect that the agenda for women – equality, tackling poverty, ending violence agaisnt women, women’s representation – can move beyond making demands of male dominated structures.’
Countries represented at the Ambassadors meeting today included Bolivia, Belize, Costa Rica, Egypt, France, Grenada, Hungary, Jordan, Lebanon, Luxembourg, Macedonia, Maldives, Morocco, Papua New Guinea, Peru, Poland, Rwanda, Spain, Sweden, Tanzania, The Gambia, Uganda, USA and Zambia.
Tomorrow Ms Harman and International Development Minister Gareth Thomas will co-host a further meeting with Non-Government Organisations concerned with women and development issues, to discuss the new UN agency for women.
Ms Harman said: ‘These meetings are an unprecedented opportunity for women Ambassadors, women in NGOs, and women ministers, to work together to make a difference to women’s lives in their own countries and internationally. Now, women in Government, in the diplomatic services, and in the third sector, can work together: not just to ask men for change, but to make change happen. Women are stronger when we all work together.’
Baroness Kinnock, who co-hosted the Ambassadors’ meeting, said: ‘The Foreign Office is pleased to have been part of a concerted cross government effort to garner interest and support for the proposal that there should be a new UN gender agency which will coordinate the essential task of bringing the rights of women to the forefront of UN business. Today’s meeting provides an excellent opportunity to hear the views of senior women diplomats based in London.’
International Development Minister Gareth Thomas, who will co-host the NGO meeting tomorrow, said: ‘The creation of a single agency for women would be a historic step for gender equality. Up until now, UN performance on gender has been disjointed, under-resourced and ineffective. That is why the UK has been pushing the UN to take action and set up the new body. Events like today’s meeting provide a unique opportunity for leading Ambassadors to come together to drive forward this work and make sure the women’s agency becomes a reality.’
Next month Ms Harman will attend the UN meeting of the Commission on the Status of Women.

No Comments on this post