Statement
STATEMENT BY Ms. DIANA OFWONA, UN WOMEN REGIONAL DIRECTOR FOR EASTERN AND
SOUTHERN AFRICA DURING THE HIGH LEVEL INTERACTIVE MEETING FOR THE ECOWAS
DELEGATIONS TO THE 6OTH SESSION OF THE UNITED NATION’S COMMISSION ON THE STATUS
OF WOMEN AT THE AFRICAN UNION PERMANENT OBSERVER MISSION IN NEW YORK, UNITED
STATES OF AMERICA ON WEDNESDAY, 16 MARCH 2016
Chair – Minister of Women’s Affairs, Cote d’Ivoire
Vice President of the Gambia
Honourable ministers
Commission of Social Affairs and Gender, of the ECOWAS Commission
Special Representative of the President of the ECOWAS Commission
Excellencies, Ambassadors
Colleagues of the United Nations System
Distinguished guests
Ladies and gentlemen
Permit me to start by commending Her Excellency Commission Dr. Fatimata Dia Sow for organizing this
High Level Interactive Meeting for the ECOWAS delegations to the 6oth session of the UN Commission on
the Status of Women and for the initiative “Zero Hunger in the ECOWAS Region.” I am humbled by the
opportunity accorded to UN Women, and me personally, to share with you UN Women’s work in the
ECOWAS region. Let me also commend ECOWAS work in promoting women’s participation in politics and
in peace building processes, as well as tackling the scourge of trafficking in persons, especially women and
children. UN Women appreciates and seeks to continue supporting those countries that developed a
national action plan on UN Security Council Resolution 1325.
Honourable Ministers, Excellencies
Within the ECOWAS region, UN Women has presence in Cote d’Ivoire, Liberia, Mali, Niger, Nigeria,
Senegal, and in Sierra Leone. In all these countries, UN Women works to support governments’
programmes that aim to promote gender equality and the empowerment of women, as part of the overall
UN System support. In each country we work in close partnership with the Ministers responsible for
gender and women affairs and other relevant government agencies and institutions including national
parliaments.
One of UN Women’s priority areas in the region is promoting women’s participation in politics and
leadership positions. My organization has worked with ministries of gender, the UN System and civil
society organizations, for instance to support aspirants for parliament and local governments across all
political parties in Cote d’Ivoire, Liberia, Nigeria, Senegal and Sierra Leone during the respective general
elections. We supported the national elections management bodies, and contributed to efforts to
promote peaceful elections through the Women’s Situation Room – a strategy that was first used in Liberia
with IN Women support and which has been recognized as a good practice that has been replicated and
adapted in other regions including Kenya, Malawi and Uganda. Once the elections are over, UN Women
continues to support the elected women, and parliament through training and technical assistance. The
support aims to enhance their effectiveness in advocating for gender equality legal reforms, and allocation
of resources to policies and programmes that promote women’s rights and empowerment.
Another priority area of our work is women’s economic empowerment. There are however a number of
challenges to women’s economic empowerment and we encourage ECOWAS and its member states to
partner with UN Women to invest more innovative strategies that move women beyond micro-credit,
micro-income generating activities in the informal sector. The Chairperson of the African Union
Commission H.E Dr. Dlamini-Zuma has challenged all of us to do more if Agenda 2063 is to be realized. For
instance, she has declared that the Hoe must go! What are we doing to ensure that within the next 10
years’ women will have the technology to increase productivity and create wealth? UN Women in 2014
organized a Sharefair on innovative rural agricultural technologies and has formed a broad partnership
with several institutions to promote replication and upscaling of the winning entries. I invite ECOWAS to
take the lead and to partner with UN Women for a similar initiative in the region. In Cote d’Ivoire, UN
Women’s work is designed to stimulate equal opportunities for women entrepreneurs by ensuring that
their voices, agency and capacities of women association are strengthened. UN Women is developing a
regional initiative – the Sahel Women Economic Resilience programme in partnership with OSES, ECAS,
ECOWAS, G5 and Government of five countries.
We also intend to strengthen our flagship programme on Women’s financial inclusion with an innovative
approach to deepening women’s economic independence and financial acumen through the
establishment of an equity fund for women; a series of capacity enhancement seminars in financial
literacy; and advocacy for women’s leadership of financial institutions.
UN Women also supports national efforts to eliminate violence against women. We commend Nigeria for
enacting the Violence Against Persons (Prohibition) Bill which was passed in March 2015 after more than
14 years of advocacy by a national Legislative Advocacy Coalition on violence against women. To ensure
effective implementation of the law, UN Women Nigeria will collaborate with key stakeholders to create
awareness and implementation of the VAPP Acts.
We’ve partnered with your countries and sister UN Agencies to respond to emergencies, whether they
arose from natural disasters, armed conflict or diseases particularly Ebola. In Liberia for instance, UN
Women identified five key priority areas to ensure the plan addresses the differentiated and specific
needs of women and girls:
1. Deployment of social safety nets, including the provision of cash transfers to support the
households most affected by EVD epidemic, with a special consideration to women on children
affected by the virus;
2. Implementation of economic stimulus programs including loan schemes, housing construction
projects for low income earners, with special consideration to various categories of women
whose economic livelihoods were adversely affected by EVD;
3. Financing the revised 7-year Health Investment Plan over the next two fiscal years to prioritize
maternal and child health (given that Liberia has one of the highest maternal mortality rates at
1072 per 100,000lbs); support to SGBV response systems; and strengthening the mental health
support and psychosocial support systems;
4. Meeting resided education investment priorities in response to the crisis to ensure a gender
responsive educational system, promoting the dignity and protection of the girl child from risks
of SGBV, provision of incentive measurers to ensure retention of girls and boys in school and
support to Ebola orphans; and
5. WASH Ebola response and recovery implementation plan must be inclusive of gender friendly
WASH facilities in schools
UN Women is encouraging the Government of Liberia to allocate 15% of the overall ERSP for Gender
equality, in accordance with the Seven Point Action Plan of the UN Secretary General.
We also support the gender ministries to fulfil their roles in mainstreaming gender in national plans,
budgets, and statistics frameworks, as well as reporting obligations under CEDAW and participation in
forums such as the Commission on the Status of Women.
In the area of peace and security, the two key components of the UN Women regional approach stress:
a) facilitating women’s contributions to efforts aimed at countering the violent extremism and conflict
prevention in the Sahel and other countries of West Africa (especially through peace huts, situation rooms
and other innovations); b) peace consolidation efforts in the Mano River Union and other post-conflict
countries; and c) training of security and justice sector as well as gender-responsive peace keeping predeployment. In Nigeria specific focus has been given to the partnership between UN Women and ECOWAS especially the Directorates of Social Affairs and Gender, Political Affairs, and Peace and Security. This partnership is guided by a Regional Strategic Plan developed by the Regional Office.
Honourable Ministers, Excellencies
The areas of focus in UN Women’s work are aligned to national priorities, to the priorities that you
identified during the Beijing+20 review, as well as the new 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development
(SDGs). I would like to end my remarks by focusing on the challenges facing us as advocates gender
equality and women’s empowerment. Following successful advocacy, the 2030nAgenda has a stand-alone
goal on gender equality and the empowerment of women and girls. There are also gender-related targets
and indicators in the other SDGs. As countries begin the process of reviewing their development plans to
align them with the SDGs and Agenda 2063, we must work hard right from the beginning to ensure that
SDG 5 is a priority for our countries. I commend you Honourable ministers for the key messages that you
agreed to during the pre-CSW meeting in Addis Ababa. They are critical to the localization,
implementation and monitoring of gender equality and the empowerment of women in the SDGs.
Finally, I would wish to put on record the tremendous support that UN Women receives from you all in
our work at country level and in New York during the CSW. Many of you have even moved your
governments to support the Organisation financially, for indeed UN Women remains severely
underfunded. We look forward to your continued support.
Thank you very much.