THE DEPUTY SECRETARY-GENERAL'S REMARKS AT WORLD WOMEN’S FORUM 2024
UN Deputy Secretary- General Amina J. Mohammed is visiting Mongolia on August 22-23 at the invitation of the President of Mongolia Khurelsukh Ukhnaa.
Ulaanbaatar, 22 August 2024
"Your Excellency Mr. Khurelsukh Ukhnaa, President of Mongolia,
Your Excellency Dr. Nataša Pirc Musar, President of the Republic of Slovenia,
Your Excellency my dear sister Ms. Battsetseg Batmunkh, MP, Minister for Foreign Affairs of Mongolia,
The UN Family,
Ladies and Gentlemen,
I would like first of all to pay great tribute to the women of Mongolia, these women who have birthed Chinggis Khan.
We celebrate your vision, your leadership and your courage
and we congratulate the women's celebration of 100 Years of the Women's Federation.
I extend my heartfelt appreciation and commend the initiative of the Government of Mongolia and its partners to convene the World Women’s Forum 2024.
I cannot think of a better way to celebrate the path of Mongolian women than to gather with others from around the world and reflect on the journey, the challenges and the successes of all women.
Building an equal world for women and girls is not just an ideal.
It is our collective responsibility, and it is crucial to address the most pressing issues of our time and to accelerate action on the Sustainable Development Goals ahead of our 2030 deadline.
We know that opportunities for women of all ages to thrive in education and employment are key to economic growth and prosperity.
We know that women’s leadership and political participation lead to better services for families and communities.
We also know that women’s involvement in climate action is needed for adaptation investments in agriculture, early warning systems and community infrastructure to be effective.
We also know that time is not on our side and we need all of our hands on deck to succeed.
We must engage men in the quest for more just and equal societies.
We need to nurture positive masculinities across the Sustainable Development Goals Agenda.
and we need societies that do not leave our boys and our men behind.
I stand here at a crucial moment for accelerating action towards the achievement of Agenda 2030, now less than 6 years away. Meanwhile, next year ushers in the Beijing+30 review.
Despite our awareness of urgency and the progress we’ve made, we find ourselves far from the finishing line.
Many of you here today have dedicated your lives to advancing the cause of women’s rights. However, with this pace, that mission will be passed down to generations that are yet unborn.
We can all agree that women and girls cannot continue to wait.
Let me share five concrete areas of action in the lives of women and girls that will bring us closer to equality:
First, the theme of this year’s conference reminds us of the need to support women's leadership for environmental and climate action.
The ‘triple planetary crisis’ of climate change, biodiversity loss, and pollution presents one of the gravest threats to humanity.
These crises are never “gender neutral”. Existing gender inequalities are amplified, posing unique threats to women’s livelihoods, rights, health, and safety.
Women’s lives and livelihoods are intricately connected to natural resources.
In a worst-case climate scenario, by 2050, more than 158 million women and girls could be pushed into poverty due to the climate crisis.
Women in the Asia-Pacific could be facing an increase in poverty that is nearly double the global rate.
Predictions suggest Asia and the Pacific will fare worse on extreme poverty levels and food insecurity due to climate change.
But these issues are not siloed.
Women play a critically important role in food security.
We must empower women in agriculture and food systems to enable food systems transformation, which will be central to climate resilience and sustainable production.
We need to support women environmental rights defenders.
We need to shine a light on young emerging women leaders and do more to support their efforts to tackle the triple planetary crisis.
We must support women leaders and entrepreneurs.
We have seen what women are capable of achieving.
and we don't have very far to go as we witnessed this in Mongolia.
Take the example of Louise Mabulo, from the Philippines. She has worked to plant over 100,000 trees and restore over 160 hectares of collective land highlighting nature-based solutions.
And many of you are here today.
As we approach the convening of three environmental COPs—the Convention on Biological Diversity in Colombia, the Framework Convention on Climate Change in Azerbaijan and the Convention to Combat Desertification in Saudi Arabia—let’s make sure women's voices are present and are central in the negotiations.
Increasing global commitments to gender equality and women’s empowerment across all areas of environmental action must also be a common thread throughout our multilateral cooperation.
Second, we must create a more equitable and supportive environment for women’s economic participation.
We must embrace the opportunities coming from the transitions to renewable energy and green and digital economies to create new sustainable jobs with dignity.
This means encouraging policies that promote full and productive employment and decent work for women while eliminating gender-based occupational segregation and wage gaps.
We must support skilling and re-skilling of women regardless of age to ensure they benefit from jobs in new and promising areas.
In this regard, the Third UN Conference on Landlocked Developing Countries in Botswana will be a key space to discuss policies for landlocked countries such as Mongolia, on areas such as resilient infrastructure, connectivity and more importantly transport.
It means preventing and eliminating all forms of discrimination, violence and sexual harassment against women in the workplace.
It also means promoting policies that help reconcile work and family as a part of a broader shift to more caring societies.
Societies where women and men count on quality public services and livable cities.
Third, it is imperative to go beyond “traditional education” to support women and girls. Initiatives that expand STEM education and improve digital access so that students can learn from their homes are great ways we can increase educational and market opportunities for all women and girls.
Lastly, we must make way for women and girls to be champions in all sports, arts, and cultural activities.
these are important elements of increasing one's GDP and diversifying one's economy.
Coming out of the Paris Olympics, the first to ensure gender parity, we have been able to celebrate the talent of women in sports. Women athletes, like Mongolia’s very own Baasankhuu Bavuudorj, Olympic silver medalist in Judo.
We must work towards preventing gender-based harassment in all fields, shifting societal norms and ensuring that women have equal support than men in making a living from sports.
Fourth, none of the concrete steps I have mentioned will be realised fully if we do not create a world in which all women and girls are free from gender-based violence. The rights of women and girls must be protected, they are after all, your mothers and your partners, your daughters your grandmothers and and we must shape a world where they can achieve their agency and live free from fear.
Dear Sisters,
As we advance towards the Summit of the Future next month and the Beijing+30 review, the urgency to embed the principles of gender equality and women’s empowerment in every aspect of the SDGs cannot be overstated.
We need policies that prioritise women's rights, especially young, indigenous and rural women, and fully include their knowledge and expertise.
Finally, we also need the financing to match that policy ambition and commitments. Accelerating financing for gender equality, including increased investment in robust disaggregated data for women, will be a key enabler for responsive, evidence-based policies and actions that ensure that we actually leave no one behind.
We, as women leaders and advocates, need to amplify our voices and continue to put gender equality and women’s empowerment at the centre of all issues.
The World Women’s Forum builds momentum and charts a path towards the 69th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women, where we will take stock of progress made in the implementation of the Beijing Platform for Action.
But let us not forget the many women and girls that have been left behind in the conflicts that we have, in the oppression that we see in Afghanistan in Gaza in Sudan.
Let’s keep this momentum to also shine a light on their burdens on their challenges on the atrocities.
Let’s help shape a world where women and girls can pursue their dreams without fear, contribute to society without barriers, and live in peace and dignity.
as a daughter of a nomad and I own cat so I know what it is to have a deep understanding of the value of lifestock in economy and in my empowerment and the empowerment of my family, especially for women and girls.
But I also have a background for which my mother comes and that's about the Welsh mountain goat in the UK and what does that teach you? Resilience, the resilience of that Welsh Mountain goat.
With the economy and resilience at the center women's empowerment, I believe that we can begin to build a just and Equitable and sustainable future for every woman and for every girl making our societies so much better for it.
Together in solidarity, I believe that we can make this vision a reality.
I thank you very much for your invitation to this forum and I wish us all a fruitful Forum.
Thank you."