Overall, progress continues to fall far short of what member states committed themselves to, at the 1995 Fourth World Conference on Women.
“Twenty-five years since the adoption of the Beijing Declaration and Platform for Action, progress towards equal power and equal rights for women remains elusive”, said UN Secretary-General António Guterres.
“No country has achieved gender equality”.
To effectively measure progress in that regard, reliable, timely and disaggregated, data are critically needed and closing data gaps requires the regular collection and use of gender statistics.
With less internet access, particularly in developing regions, women also face difficulties maintaining valuable personal connections and carrying on day-to-day activities during lockdowns.
“Many may also have been trapped in unsafe environments...and at risk of experiencing intimate partner violence”, Liu stated.
Moreover, he pointed out that women face reduced access to sexual and reproductive health services; and need more time to care for the elderly, sick, and children, including home-based education; adding that they are also at higher risk of infection than men in the workplace.
And only 18 percent of enterprises surveyed had a female Chief Executive Officer in 2020. — UN news