Gender Equality

Building the World After Covid-19 With Women And Girls

It has been more than 200 days since the outbreak of COVID-19 in December and every community around the world has been impacted. Our lives have changed.  And we are learning new ways of supporting one another as economies slowly reopen.

In Africa, the number of cases has now surpassed 500,000. Since March, the virus has claimed 11 959 lives, overtaking the 11 308 lives lost in the world’s worst Ebola outbreak in West Africa between 2014 and 2016. And if these numbers are low compared to other countries, the impact of the lockdown and curfews on the livelihoods of local communities including vulnerable women in rural and remote areas has been devastating.

There is a mounting food security crisis due to lockdowns and curfews, which have restricted mobility and disrupted markets to grow, buy, and sell food. One partner in Senegal noted “If COVID does not kill us, hunger will,” says Ousmane Sarr, Communications Officer at RESOPP. In fact, the Food and Agriculture Organization (FAO) has warned that the world could see famines of “biblical proportions” if no action is taken. More than 60% of employed women in sub-Saharan Africa work in agriculture yet will most likely suffer from hunger if they are not protected from this potential threat.

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Crossroads is mounting a COVID response with local partners to respond to urgent food security needs in vulnerable communities providing emergency food and sanitary supplies (soap, rice, grains, pulses, etc.) with education critical for prevention; as well as new support to women and girls at risk of gender-based violence.  Women and girls make up the largest group of people exposed to contagion because of their role as caregivers. They are at the frontlines of the pandemic, bearing most of the responsibility for caring for the sick and elderly in their homes and communities. There is a real and present risk of high fatality rates from the disease in developing countries where health and sanitation systems are weak if contagion cannot be prevented. Now is the time to act.

Many of Crossroads partners are reporting increased incidence of violence and abuse of girls, with some countries reporting a surge in teen pregnancies. According to the UN, there has been a ‘horrifying global surge’ in domestic violence towards women and girls, linked to COVID-19 lockdowns. Women are experiencing a heightened risk of gender-based violence from abusive partners and increased isolation, separating them from the people and resources that can best help them.

School closures due to the lockdowns have also increased the risks for girls to be sexually exploited or forced out of school forever because of unintended teen pregnancies and early marriages. There is a need to act now to ensure specific protections for the rights of girls and young women. Cuts to education budgets and rising poverty caused by the COVID-19 pandemic could force at least 9.7 million children out of school forever by the end of this year, with millions more falling behind in learning. And girls are more likely to be more affected than boys, with many being forced out of school, into the labour market -- as is already reported in Burkina Faso where we work -- or into early marriage.

Crossroads International with the support of its funding partners is mobilizing resources to help partners re-tool in the face of new challenges.  Direct support for things like access to telecommunications can support the provision of essential services to local communities and help kickstart local economies. As information services move to digital platforms to accommodate physical distancing, our partners in remote areas need help to adapt and provide emergency outreach and counselling over the phone or online. As resilient leaders, farmers, caretakers, and business owners, women can help solve these problems: we need to invest in supporting them. Only by working together, by putting resources in women’s hands can we come out of this pandemic stronger than before.

-Wanjiro Ndungu, Manager Philanthropy, Crossroads International

Women’s Voices Grow Stronger…

The United Nation’s Commission on the Status of Women recently hosted their 61st Forum with a focus on Women and Girl’s Economic Empowerment in the Changing World of Work. More than 8000 women, feminists and women’s organizations, and some men, united for a common purpose. If women are to achieve gender equality by 2030 (Equality and inclusion are at the heart of the 2030 Agenda for the UN’s Agenda for Sustainable Development), we must all recognize the gender gap in work and employment and create a cohesive action-oriented plan that all NGO’s can support.

The Sisters of St. Joseph have an NGO office in New York at the UN. This gave me the opportunity to join this global effort to work towards gender equality and economic empowerment for women and girl’s. It is not possible to describe in a blog the multiple workshops with women presenting what is happening in their part of the world. Rather I would like to outline in a series of short blogs the incredible accomplishments already achieved by women (previous gatherings and conferences) and critical work that still needs to happen in order to achieve equality, given the multiple challenges faced by women today. 

The Forum gives women, an opportunity to come together and ensure through the good work that is happening around the world that on one is left behind. There is still much to do. We must continue to reach out to the most marginalized women and girls, and those experiencing multiple and intersecting forms of discrimination. Civil society plays a critical role in addressing the unique needs of these women and girls and capitalizing on their strengths and agency to move toward substantive equality, a Planet 50 – 50 by 2030.  We in Canada, although better than some parts of the world, still have work to move the needle along to achieve gender equality.

This ambitious goal offers me inspiration and possibilities for strengthening partnerships and alliance so efforts can continue to increase the diversity and number of people working on the achievement of gender equality. Wherever you are, we all become more conscious of how our places of employment are working to achieve gender equality.  We each can do something to help move us along toward achieving this goal by 2030.  Our voices are needed and they are growing stronger.

Joan Atkinson, CSJ

If not me, who, and if not now, when!

Last week many cities across our country hosted events called “Take Back the Night”, focusing on the need to end violence against women.  Even the need for such rallies once again remind us that Gender Equality is still not a reality in Canada or around the world. Embedded in this blog is a message from Emma Watson, of Harry Potter fame, who addressed the UN General Assembly with a strong message for men and women reminding us that this is not just a women’s issue, but it is also an issue for men as well.  She has launched a “Heforshe” campaign, and although only 24 years old, reminds us that gender bias and gender violence will not change unless we all embrace this issue. “If not me, who, and if not now, when!” 

Joan Atkinson CSJ