Text Only
Search

 
UN Special Envoy for AIDS in Africa Calls for Multilateral UN Agency for Women


07 July 2006
listen to the interview with Stephen Lewis - Download (MP3) audio clip
listen to the interview with Stephen Lewis - Listen (MP3) audio clip

The UN Special Envoy for AIDS in Africa says the deplorable state of so many women around the world calls for a multi-lateral UN Agency, especially designed to address their needs.  Stephen Lewis recently addressed a high-level panel on UN reform in Geneva, outlining what he calls the UN’s failed effort so far to effectively address women’s issues. 

From Maputo, Mozambique, he told English to Africa reporter Cole Mallard, “We have United Nations agencies for everything from children, to health, to food, to education.  We do not have a United Nations Agency to represent, assist, liberate and enhance the lives of more than half the world’s people, and women are suffering grievously all over the world.  And as I watch the carnage and ravages of AIDS in Africa and the toll it has taken on women, I know that finally, after 50 years of passivity and paralysis, it’s time to have an agency through which women can assert their rights.” 

Dr. Lewis says, “Women are in terrible trouble” because of their exposure to gender inequity, sexual violence, HIV/AIDS, maternal mortality, armed conflict and a lack of economic empowerment. He says the way to make this agency effective is to include women around the world because, to date, they have not ”had anything to relate to within the UN.”  Lewis says helping them design the governing structure of the new agency will “ensure proper representation, keep the governments in line, measure accountability, [and] have a whole new view of the way in which the world works within the United Nations.” 

The U.N. envoy says this first new UN agency in the 21st century should be constructed differently.  Lewis points out that he does not mean the agency would replace other UN groups that deal with women’s issues, such as the World Health Organization or the UN Population Fund.  Specifically he says, “I’m advocating for a new, independent, full-fledged, operational United Nations Agency with country capacity on the ground, much like UNICEF.  The time has come for this idea to take hold.” 

Let us know what you think of this report and other stories on our website. Send your views to AFRICA@VOANEWS.COM, and include your phone number. Or, call us here in Washington, DC at (202) 205-9942. After you hear the VOA identification, press 30 to leave a message. We want to hear what you have to say!

emailme.gif E-mail This Article
printerfriendly.gif Print Version

  Top Story
Obama Ends Ghana Visit

  More Stories
China Rushing Supplies to Quake-Hit Zone
Obama Addresses Africans from Ghana  Audio Clip Available
Iraqi Shi'ite Lawmakers Protest British Troop Extension
Iranian Foreign Minister Says Tehran Preparing 'Package' for West
Pakistan: Trial of Mumbai Attackers to Start Next Week
Obama Urges Patience on Economic Recovery
Reports: New Evidence Points to N. Korean in Cyber Attacks
Mugabe Calls For Unity; Slams Western Nations
Report: Bush Administration Surveillance Program Legally Questionable
New York Times: Bush Team Discouraged Probe of Mass Taliban Deaths
China Increases Police Presence on Xinjiang
Honduras Talks End with No Agreement
US Braced for H1N1 Swine Flu Return  Video clip available
Gary in Indiana Hosts Michael Jackson Memorial  Audio Clip Available
Republic of Congo to Hold Presidential Election
Catholic Church in Kenya Promotes Alternative to Female Circumcision  Video clip available