Global gender equality won’t be achieved until the year 2154, experts say

Feminism on the rise
Gender equality won’t be achieved until 2154
300 years away?!
“Gender equality is vanishing before our eyes”
Maternal mortality and child marriage
Mahsa Amini protests in Iran
Women’s rights threatened around the world
Women banned from public spaces in Afghanistan
Talibans barred secondary school for girls
UN Women visited Afghanistan recently
Ukraine war also affected women and girls
Reports of sexual violence in Ukraine
Women’s reproductive rights rolled back
Roe vs Wade overturned
Abortion banned in Poland
Collective and urgent action needed
Promoting female participation in science and technology
Centuries of patriarchy created huge gender gap
Human rights violations of Palestinian women and girls
Deliberate targeting of women
Lack of healthcare for pregnant women
Feminism on the rise

Feminist movements are on the rise around the world, but that doesn’t mean that we are close to achieving gender equality. In fact, experts have predicted it could take more than a hundred a years to attain.

Gender equality won’t be achieved until 2154

A June 2023 report from the World Economic Forum estimated that women won’t attain parity with men for another 131 years. In other words, not until 2154.

300 years away?!
And earlier, on international Women’s Day 2023, the UN made an even grimmer prediction: they said gender equality was 300 years away.
“Gender equality is vanishing before our eyes”

Speaking to the key UN women’s rights group ahead of International Women’s Day on March 8, 2023, UN Secretary General António Guterres said gender equality is “vanishing before our eyes.

Maternal mortality and child marriage

Guterres cited high rates of maternal mortality, girls being forced into early marriage, and girls being kidnapped and assaulted for attending school as evidence that hope of achieving gender equality “is growing more distant.”

Mahsa Amini protests in Iran

In his speech, Guterres did not mention Iran, which was expelled from the 45-member commission in December 2022 over protests following the death of Mahsa Amini in the custody of the country’s so-called “morality police.”

Women’s rights threatened around the world

However, Guterres said that women’s rights “are being abused, threatened, and violated around the world,” and named a few countries, including Afghanistan, where he said “women and girls have been erased from public life.”

Women banned from public spaces in Afghanistan

The Taliban have placed sweeping restrictions on women's rights and freedom, excluding them from most areas of the workforce and banning them from parks, gyms, and public bathhouses since they took over the country in 2021.

Talibans barred secondary school for girls

Moreover, the extremist regime barred girls from attending secondary schools beyond grade six.

UN Women visited Afghanistan recently

Guterres said then that the deputy secretary-general and the executive director of UN Women visited Afghanistan and conveyed to the Taliban authorities that they “will never give up fighting for women and girls”.

Ukraine war also affected women and girls

“Crisis and conflict affect women and girls first and worst,” Guterres said, including the war in Ukraine as an example.

Reports of sexual violence in Ukraine

Last year, the UN called for an investigation into reports of sexual violence against Ukrainian women and children following Russia’s invasion.

Women’s reproductive rights rolled back

Guterres also said that in many places, women’s sexual and reproductive rights are being rolled back,” though he didn’t specify where.

 
Roe vs Wade overturned

In June 2022, the United States Supreme Court overturned Roe vs. Wade, leaving the right to abortion up to individual states.

Abortion banned in Poland

The year before, a ban on abortions due to fetal defects took effect in Poland, essentially ending almost all abortions in the country.

Collective and urgent action needed

To achieve gender equality, Guterres called for “collective” and “urgent” action, from increasing education, income and employment for women and girls.

Promoting female participation in science and technology
Furthermore, the UN Secretary General talked about the importance of promoting the participation of women and girls in science and technology, sectors in which only 3% of Nobel Prize winners are women.
Centuries of patriarchy created huge gender gap

“Centuries of patriarchy, discrimination and harmful stereotypes have created a huge gender gap. Global frameworks are not working for the world’s women and girls. They need to change.” Guterres concluded.

Human rights violations of Palestinian women and girls

Now, in 2024, a new gender crisis can be added to the list: the human rights violations to which Palestinian women and girls continue to be subjected in the Gaza Strip and the West Bank, per the UN.

Deliberate targeting of women

“We are shocked by reports of the deliberate targeting and extrajudicial killing of Palestinian women and children in places where they sought refuge, or while fleeing. Some of them were reportedly holding white pieces of cloth when they were killed by the Israeli army or affiliated forces,” the experts said.

Lack of healthcare for pregnant women

Not to mention that pregnant Palestinian women have no access to healthcare and many have been subject to miscarriages or cesareans without anesthesia, according to Al Jazeera reports.

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