-Ensuring that women have equal status and opportunities is the key
to global prosperity, US Secretary of State Hillary Clinton said
Saturday, in a message to a conference in Spain.
"When women are afforded their rights and afforded equal
opportunities in education, health care, employment and political
participation, they help drive social and economic progress," she said
in the video message broadcast at the Spain-Africa Women for a Better
World conference in Valencia in eastern Spain.
"But when they are marginalized and mistreated as is still the case
in too many places in Africa and around the world, broad and lasting is
impossible. Empowering women is a key to global progress and
prosperity."
Clinton said much work to promote gender equality around the world
remained to be done since the 1995 United Nations women's conference in
Beijing, where she, as US first lady, declared that "Women's rights are
human rights."
"The message from that conference rang loudly and clearly and still
echoes across cultures and continents. Now we have made great progress
in the years since but we all know that there is a long way to go," she
said.
More than 500 women, including Liberian President Ellen Johnson
Sirleaf, former Chilean president Michelle Bachelet and over 50
ministers, from around the world were scheduled to take part in the
two-day gathering which got underway Saturday in the Mediterranean port
city.
Kenyan environmental activist Wangari Maathai, who won the Nobel
Peace Prize in 2004 for her work on environmentally sustainable
development, urged participants to help protect the tropical forest of
Congo, the second largest in the world after the Amazon forest.
"Help protect the forests of Congo, they are important not only to
help regulate the climate on a global level, but they also drain carbon
from the rest of the world and are important for biodiversity," she
said.
She also warned that if Europe does not do more to prevent
desertification in Africa, it will see a surge in the arrival of
migrants from the continent.
Four main issues -- education, health care, female representation in
positions of power and economic development -- will be discussed at the
event, which was preceded on Friday by an informal meeting European
Union equality ministers.
It is the second time that Spain, which currently holds the rotating
EU presidency, has hosted a Women for a Better World meeting after
Madrid in 2007.
The first such gathering was held in Mozambique in 2006. Others were
held in Niger in 2008 and Liberia in 2009.
David Mikael Taclino
Inyu Web Development and Design
Creative Writer
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