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Releases ECA Press Release No. 93/1999 PLANS UNVEILED TO SPEED IMPLEMENTATION OF DAKAR/ BEIJING PLATFORMS Addis Ababa, 26 November 1999 (ECA) The Sixth African Regional Conference on Women ended here today with a Regional Plan of Action which maps out priorities and strategies for the next five years to accelerate the implementation of the Dakar and Beijing Platforms of Action. The Plan proposes: coordination mechanisms to be established at national, subregional and regional levels; strategies for monitoring and evaluating the status of implementation of the Platforms of Action; means of mobilizing resources to enable implementation of the Platforms; and actions to enhance access to and provision of basic goods and services by African women. The Plan is in response to a number of new developments that have constituted serious constraints to addressing the critical areas of concern over the last five years. According to the Plan, "the combined impact of past macro-economic policies and globalization has resulted in a number of adverse consequences [including] overall social dislocation and the increased numbers of people living below the poverty line". Women ensure a disproportionate share of the burden, as they "assume greater responsibility for the care of the poor and the helpless in addition to other productive and reproductive roles". These experiences, argues the document, "require new policy shifts from a single factor approach to a more comprehensive multi-sectoral approach to peoples well-being and security". Stressing that Governments should prioritize innovative actions to respond to the growing problem, the Plan points out that some countries have made a start in the right direction. Among them is Algeria, which in 1996 instituted a social protection programme that provides financial assistance to poor families, the elderly and disabled. Another success story is South Africa, which has formulated a social partnership with business and labour to address poverty and unemployment. In Guinea and Sao Tome and Principe, for example, allowances are paid to the elderly and invalids. The Plan categorizes the Post-Beijing challenges in six clusters:
More than 1,500 participants drawn from senior levels of governments, civil society, regional institutions, bilateral agencies, agencies of the United Nations, and multilateral partners took part in the five-day conference, which also constituted the Africa regional preparatory meeting for Beijing plus five, the Global Review due to take place next June in New York. A Draft Declaration, read out at the closing session, recognized that a number of efforts had been made since 1995 to implement the platforms of action, among them: the ratification by 47 African countries of the Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination against Women; greater participation of women in politics and decision-making; a growing and vibrant womens activism and advocacy for peace; and a global consensus that womens rights are human rights and that violence against women is the most widespread violation of human rights. The Declaration however recognized with grave concern that major gaps and shortcoming persisted, among them:
(END) The full text of the Draft Declaration, Regional Plan of Action and other available addresses, statements, presentations and documents will be published on the 6th Regional Conference Home Page, which can be accessed at: http://www.bellanet.org/partners/aisi/6thregionalconference. Peter da Costa |
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