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#GirlChildDay: Sustainable resourcing needed to ensure powerful girls worldwide, says UN

Girls Girls
Photo: UNICEF

Sima Bahous, executive director of UN Women, says inadequate investment in girls’ rights implementation is limiting adolescent females from fulfilling their potential.

Bahous said this in a statement issued on Tuesday to mark the 2022 International Day of the Girl Child, celebrated annually on October 11.

In line with this year’s theme, ‘Our Time is Now – Our Rights, Our Future’, she said it indicates that with the right factors in place, girls have the capability to excel in their various endeavours.

“In the past ten years I have seen girls’ interests and influence rise in global agendas and contribute to achieving the Sustainable Development Goals. Whether in climate, education, mental wellbeing, gender-based violence, or sexual and reproductive health and rights, girls are propelling themselves forward as leaders, advocates and changemakers,” the statement reads.

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“Their activism in feminist movements and mobilization for gender equality, including Generation Equality, are a key part of shaping positive, grounded action in their local communities and globally.

“Yet while there has been progress, substantial challenges remain. In fact, based on current rates of progress UN Women estimates that women and girls will not achieve full equality with men and boys for another 300 years.

“Education that truly equips students for the future is critical to breaking this trend, building agency, equality, voice and power for the world’s women and girls. SDGs 4 and 5 work hand in hand. Yet poverty, cultural norms and practices, poor infrastructure, violence, and fragility continue to raise barriers.

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“Investment in the implementation of girls’ rights remains inadequate, contributing to short-term, siloed approaches that ultimately disadvantage adolescents.”

She added that there must be deliberate commitment by stakeholders to ensure fair distribution of opportunities.

“Meeting these challenges in a world where the risks for girls are more acute than ever, requires all stakeholders to take concerted, robust action. We need disaggregated age and gender-based data to inform policies that directly impact the lives of girls. We need sustainable, well targeted resourcing to those most affected, to ensure safe, healthy, educated, and powerful adolescent girls worldwide,” she said.

“I envision a world where the agency and leadership of adolescent girls is recognized; they live in full enjoyment of their rights; free of violence and discrimination; as equal leaders and members of societies and communities.

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“On this International Day of the Girl Child, let us continue our collective work to achieve this and to advance the objectives of Our Common Agenda. Girls can and must lead from the front, never being left out or left behind.

“This decade of acceleration must prioritize girls in all their diversity. Now is their time, their rights, their future.”

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