Audio By Carbonatix
Governments and aid donor partners need to make greater efforts in tackling gender inequality if they are to successfully combat global poverty, the United Nations and the European Commission (EC) have stressed at the high-level forum in Accra.
“Over a billion women worldwide continue to be trapped in poverty,” the United Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM) Director, Inés Alberdi, told the 3rd High-Level Forum on Aid Effectiveness.
“Where women can’t thrive, national development strategies and progress towards the Millennium Development Goals [MDG] are in jeopardy. There can be no aid effectiveness without a focus on gender equality.”
Including women’s ministries and gender equality advocates in national development and aid delivery planning increases the effectiveness of aid assistance, according to UNIFEM, the EC and the UN International Training Centre of the International Labour Organization (ITC/ILO).
Gender-responsive budgeting, which UNIFEM has supported in some 40 countries, at times with the EC, has been effective in ensuring aid resources benefit women’s development needs.
“Today, we know how important the role of women is in society, to health, nutrition and education of children, to economic growth and the development of a country,” said the European Commissioner for Development and Humanitarian Aid, Louis Michel.
“[This] Forum on Aid Effectiveness offers a unique opportunity for governments and donors to come together and commit to accelerate achievements in gender equality. This opportunity is not to be missed,” he added.
The EC/UN Partnership on Gender Equality for Development and Peace programme also urged governments and donors to further ensure that gender equality advocates are part of the entire development planning, programming, budgeting and monitoring process.
Developing countries and donor partners today started the three-day meeting of the forum, reviewing progress towards the Paris Declaration on Aid Effectiveness, signed by 100 donors and governments in March 2005.
Credit: UN Information Office, Accra
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Tags:
DISCLAIMER: The Views, Comments, Opinions, Contributions and Statements made by Readers and Contributors on this platform do not necessarily represent the views or policy of Multimedia Group Limited.
Latest Stories
-
DVLA warns against fake SMS traffic fines and fraudulent payment links
8 minutes -
Asafo Market traders, drivers appeal to KMA over recurring flooding
16 minutes -
Mahama’s approval rating drops to 58.9% but majority of Ghanaians still back him — IEA poll
17 minutes -
Veep welcomes Mahama home after UK, Belarus visits
25 minutes -
Tribute book “IMPRESSIONS” launched in honour of KNUST’s Prof. Ibok Oduro
31 minutes -
Joy Prime TV to broadcast World Cup 2026 matches
32 minutes -
Northern Region leaders back Ghana vaccine production plan but raise quality and access concerns
35 minutes -
Ghana’s economy expands by 6.4% in Q1 of 2026, driven by Services and Mining
40 minutes -
CSIR soil scientist warns imported fertilisers may be degrading Ghana’s farmlands
42 minutes -
KATH OPD resumes full operations after suspension of doctors’ strike
46 minutes -
Ahmad Tea announces Antoine Semenyo as Global Brand Ambassador
48 minutes -
Tarkwa-Nsuaem NPP elections halted by Sekondi High Court over injunction application
49 minutes -
Ghana’s unemployment pegged at 13.1%, inequality at 43.5%
50 minutes -
GMet warns of heightened flood risk in Accra as June rainfall projected to intensify
53 minutes -
Tension at Afari Military Hospital as soldiers block Minority MPs’ inspection of abandoned facility
58 minutes