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(L-R) Former Unesco director Irina Bokova, Helen Clark and Susana Malcorra who are among 30 female world leaders warning that women’s rights are being eroded.
(L-R) Former Unesco director Irina Bokova, Helen Clark and Susana Malcorra are among 30 female world leaders warning that women’s rights are being eroded. Composite: Emmnual Fradin, Sarah Lee, Argentinian Foreign Ministry/The Guardian/EPA
(L-R) Former Unesco director Irina Bokova, Helen Clark and Susana Malcorra are among 30 female world leaders warning that women’s rights are being eroded. Composite: Emmnual Fradin, Sarah Lee, Argentinian Foreign Ministry/The Guardian/EPA

Rise of the 'strongman': Dozens of female world leaders warn women's rights being eroded

This article is more than 5 years old

Open-letter signatory Susana Malcorra says women ‘need to be very prepared to fight back’ amid global political shift

More than 30 female world leaders including current and former heads of state have called for a fightback against the erosion of women’s rights, with one former minister singling out countries led by “a macho-type strongman” as part of the problem.

Susana Malcorra, the former Argentinian foreign minister, said in some countries the push for women’s rights was seen as something that harmed men, rather than an opportunity to change gender expectations in a way that helped everyone.

“There is a sense of the established power being threatened by women gaining respect,” she said.

Helen Clark, the former prime minister of New Zealand, and Irina Bokova, the Bulgarian politician and former Unesco director have joined Malcorra in launching the campaign, which includes the release of an open letter.

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The letter calls for “the need to achieve full gender equality and empowerment of women across all ambits” and has been signed by dozens of prominent women, including Christiana Figueres, former executive secretary of the UN framework convention on climate change, Ethiopian president Sahle-Work Zewde and former Irish president Mary Robinson.

Malcorra said that the pushback against women’s rights was “crystal clear” in several countries, especially in those countries where populism had led to the rise of “a macho-type strongman” leader, naming Brazil, the Philippines, Italy and parts of eastern Europe.

“There is a sense of the established power being threatened by women gaining respect. It’s a proposition where, if men get paternity leave for example, it’s not that they lose anything, they gain by having responsibility for the family, they gain by a closer relationship with the children, that’s not zero sum, that’s a win-win. But it’s clear that there are corners of power in the world that don’t see it like that.”

The campaign came about after Malcorra, Clark and Bokova were struck by the same urgent concern at last year’s UN general assembly in New York – that the rise of populism and decline of multilateralism meant that hard-won gains in women’s rights were being eroded.

“We had a sense that there was another wave of pushback on gender equality and gender empowerment and the policies that we worked so hard to achieve,” said Malcorra, who served as foreign minister from 2015 to 2017.

“We have to be prepared to raise our concerns, otherwise we will be like the frog put into cold water which starts to warm up, and all of a sudden you find yourself in boiling water. We need to be very prepared to fight back,” she said.

Malcorra added that even in countries without strongman leaders, women should guard against thinking their rights were safe. “We are worried that we take for granted what we have. That, in our view, is our biggest weakness.”

“First we haven’t arrived to where we should be: equality in every possible field. Second, the things we have obtained, I refer to the case of abortion in the US, this is an ongoing process that has a pushback … we need to defend what we have achieved before. We cannot be comfortable and we feel that in certain ways, what’s done is done.”


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