Gender equality

Feature Story

Young women and girls need a seat at the table to stop new HIV infections

07 June 2018

Lucy Wanjiku is a young mother living with HIV and team leader of Positive Young Women Voices from Kenya. She was just 19 years old when she found out that she was living with HIV, a devastating shock for her. “It was one thing to become an adolescent mother and another to be HIV-positive,” said Lucy. “I was discriminated against by the community, my family and even at the health facility. There is no real support structure available.”

Ms Wanjiku’s story is a familiar one in sub-Saharan Africa. Around 6900 adolescent girls and young women between the ages of 15 and 24 years become newly infected with HIV every week—5500 of whom live in sub-Saharan Africa.

Ms Wanjiku is now using her voice to help others and raise awareness around the challenges that young women face in Kenya on a daily basis. At an event organized by UNAIDS at the European Union Development Days (EDD) forum in Brussels, Belgium, Ms Wanjiku gave the audience an alarming insight into issues around gender-based violence, early marriage, intimate partner violence, transactional sex, low school attendance rates and lack of economic empowerment, which are all key risk factors for HIV that young women and girls face every day.

“Support groups work,” said Ms Wanjiku. “Community-based organizations can facilitate this smoothly when supported. We need to engage more adolescent girls and young women leaders at the decision-making tables to tailor what works for us so that it’s sustainable.”

The event, entitled Empowering Women and Girls—Reducing New HIV Infections, highlighted the importance of empowering young women and girls to stop new HIV infections. Held on 5 and 6 June, the EDD forum was attended by more than 6000 people from 140 countries, representing 1200 organizations from the development community.

“Considerable efforts need to be taken to reach the Fast-Track Target of reducing the number of new HIV infections among adolescent girls and young women to below 100 000 per year by 2020,” said Tim Martineau, UNAIDS Deputy Executive Director, Programme, a.i. “The HIV Prevention 2020 Road Map, launched by UNAIDS, the United Nations Population Fund and partners in 2017, will be critical to guiding efforts and I cannot stress enough the importance of also engaging men and boys for long-lasting change.”

The event was moderated by Ebony Johnson, a public health and gender strategist, and brought together a wealth of expertise and experience from youth activists, people living with HIV, civil society and international development representatives.

Highlighting the importance of access to information, Melodi Tamarzians, a youth ambassador on sexual and reproductive health and rights from the Netherlands, highlighted that only 34% of young people have accurate knowledge about HIV prevention and transmission. “I believe in the infinite power of young people to make a change for themselves and their communities,” she said. “And they need access to comprehensive sexuality education, which is not only a key for preventing violence but has far-reaching individual and societal benefits.”

Winnie Byanyima, the Executive Director of Oxfam International, addressed policy barriers and reminded the audience that in order to enhance agency among young women and girls, there needs to be space for young people, especially women and girls, to take part in decision-making processes. She added that investment needs to be secure in order to strengthen economic empowerment to enhance women’s health. “Young women affected by HIV can be afraid of accessing health care because of a lack of confidentiality, discrimination and cost. We need to invest in peer education and free access to health care to empower women to protect their health,” she said.

UNAIDS, together with a wide range of partners, including women living with HIV and women’s organizations, works towards meeting the needs of girls and women across all targets in the 2016 United Nations Political Declaration on Ending AIDS. UNAIDS works towards ensuring that women and girls everywhere have their rights fulfilled and are empowered to protect themselves against HIV and that all women and girls living with HIV have immediate access to treatment and care.

Documents

UNAIDS Gender Action Plan 2018–2023 — A framework for accountability

05 June 2018

Gender equality in the workplace is a human right and critical to the performance and effectiveness of UNAIDS. Organizations with more equal representation of women at the senior management level considerably outperform their counterparts with a lower representation of women in senior positions. Gender-balanced teams have greater potential for creativity and innovation and contribute to better outcomes in decisionmaking. The centrality of advancing gender equality, including through the achievement of gender parity, is increasingly being recognized, as signalled by the historic System-wide Strategy on Gender Parity, launched by the United Nations Secretary-General in 2017.

Feature Story

Heads of H6 agencies embrace new results framework

07 May 2018

Around the world, many women, children and adolescents still have little or no access to quality health services and education, clean air and water, adequate sanitation and good nutrition. And far too many face violence and discrimination, unequal access to power and opportunity, and numerous barriers that harm their physical, mental and emotional health and well-being.

To accelerate change, the executive heads of the H6 partnership met on the sidelines of the United Nations System Chief Executives Board in London, United Kingdom, on 2 May and agreed a new results framework, H6 Results 2020. H6 Results 2020 aims to shape the H6 partnership into a trusted, valued source for technical support, strategic policy advice and best practices for the health and well-being of women, children and adolescents.

Developed under the chairpersonship of UNAIDS Executive Director Michel Sidibé, H6 Results 2020 is closely aligned with the Every Woman Every Child Every Adolescent Global Strategy and the 2020 Every Woman Every Child Partners’ Framework. H6 Results 2020 sets ambitious goals while committing to deliver on a number of concrete results for 2020.

“I am excited about our revitalized H6 partnership. As the technical arm of the Every Woman Every Child movement, we plan to further streamline and simplify the health architecture, coordinating with key partners to leverage political capital, technical expertise and advocacy for results for women, children and adolescents everywhere,” said Mr Sidibé.

Taking forward the vision endorsed by the executive heads in March 2018, H6 Results 2020 builds on the achievements of the H6 to date and reinforces existing mechanisms while strengthening United Nations mechanisms to support countries. It outlines how the H6 will harmonize efforts of the six H6 organizations and with key partners at the country, regional and global levels and will focus on the countries with the highest burdens of maternal, child and adolescent mortality and morbidity for intensified action.

“The H6 partnership plays a critical role in ensuring that countries focus on the health needs of women in an intersectional way, with laser-like focus on gender equality, human rights and other enablers, such as education,” said Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, the Executive Director of UN Women.

By amplifying its added value, the H6 partnership seeks to serve as a living laboratory for United Nations reform—heeding the call of the United Nations Secretary-General for a more country-focused, coordinated, efficient and accountable development system better able to assist countries in implementing the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development.

“It is important that the United Nation comes together to focus its technical support on key priorities in a few high-burden countries, and what must drive our focus is results for people,” said Tedros Adhanom Ghebreyesus, the Director-General of the World Health Organization.

While committed to driving progress across a range of priorities for women, children and adolescent health, H6 Results 2020 puts clear emphasis on reaching adolescents. Adolescent girls and boys (aged 10–19 years) remain a particularly underserved population by the health and social programmes of many countries. Ensuring the health and well-being of adolescents is critical to delivering on the mandate of each of the H6 partners.

“The H6 partnership has proven that working in close collaboration and bringing different expertise and experience to the table is not only effective in enabling countries to deliver rights-based quality care for the women and girls left furthest behind, but also ensures strong country ownership,” said Natalia Kanem, the Executive Director of the United Nations Population Fund.

Feature Story

Bringing about change

25 April 2018

David Chipanta started his UNAIDS career in Liberia as the UNAIDS Country Director, where he helped to strengthen the national AIDS commission and national strategy framework. He is particularly proud of putting gender and ending sexual violence front and centre in the AIDS response in the country and giving the national network of people living with HIV more of a voice.

“What I found exciting was tackling the many barriers that surround access to HIV treatment, prevention, care and support,” he said. By barriers, he means the stigma, discrimination, poverty and inequalities that constrain people from accessing HIV services.

An economist by training, Mr Chipanta remarked, “We cannot forget the importance of all the things that relate to people’s lives—do they feel secure, do they have food, do they have a house, a family, a job?” Giving the example of Zambia, he described some people only taking their HIV medicine during the rainy season because food is more readily available then.

“It hit me that the peripheral stuff is very important, because without it HIV services will have a limited impact,” Mr Chipanta said. His current job as the UNAIDS Social Protection Senior Adviser in Geneva, Switzerland, focuses on just that—connecting people affected by HIV to social safety nets and improving livelihoods, as well as reducing poverty and improving education.

“UNAIDS has created more awareness about social protection services and the hurdles that people living with HIV face,” he said. For example, he explained that in Liberia and Sierra Leone, sex workers said they weren’t accessing social protection services because the administrators often treated them badly; in response, his office set up sensitivity training.

Another issue close to his heart is girls’ education. Keeping girls in school has been shown to lower HIV prevalence and is an important factor in increasing access to HIV treatment. “In low-income settings, we shone the light on the importance of cash transfers to keep girls in school,” Mr Chipanta said. His next challenge is advocating for more synergies with programmes for mentoring, empowerment and social support.

“As a person living with HIV, I never thought I would accomplish so much,” he said. In 1991, when he found out his HIV status in his native Zambia, he assumed that his life was over. “I thought, before I die, let me help others,” he added.

“I was personally motivated to work in the HIV field,” he said. “But I felt like I wanted to become an expert in my own right.”

Krittayawan (Tina) Boonto reflected on her 20 years at UNAIDS by also saying she couldn’t believe how far she had got. Ms Boonto started work in her native Thailand before moving to Geneva.

“It was supposed to be temporary, but I stayed seven years,” she said.

She then went to Indonesia as the Programme Coordination Adviser in 2005. She helped the Ministry of Health with technical support and accessing financial resources from the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria. That experience proved pertinent, because in 2010 she moved to Myanmar as the Senior Investment and Efficiency Adviser.

“The country was opening up at that time, so my field experience in other countries came in handy,” she said. For example, UNAIDS advocated to decentralize the provision of antiretroviral medicines so that people from rural areas could get their treatment at primary health-care centres without traveling to the main cities.

“It was so rewarding to be on the ground and witness the change.” According to Ms Boonto, antiretroviral medicine access shot up to more than 120 000 people accessing the medicines, up from 30 000 people in three years.

“That’s when I realized that it’s not just about money, it’s also about the willingness to change,” she said.

A year ago, she returned to Indonesia, but this time as the UNAIDS Country Director. It’s been challenging for her because despite the scale-up when she was in the country the first time, Indonesia lags behind its neighbours, such as Thailand and Myanmar, in terms of antiretroviral medicine access and reducing new HIV infections. “It ranks third after India and China in the region in terms of new HIV infections,” Ms Boonto said.

Her tactic has been to raise HIV awareness among decision-makers and stress to them that the epidemic is not under control. “We present data and push to keep HIV a priority,” she said. Recently, she has been knocking on doors to raise alarm bells about tuberculosis—a disease that remains one of the leading causes of death among people living with HIV, despite being treatable and preventable.

“It all boils down to political will and getting the autonomous country districts on board once the Ministry of Health approves,” she said. Not flinching, Ms Boonto said, “My job never lets me forget what I am working for: people living with HIV.” She added, “We are still relevant and are still much needed, and that is the greatest satisfaction of all.”

Satisfaction for Catherine Sozi has been observing the shift from, “How can we roll out treatment for so many people, to getting 21 million people on treatment in the space of 10 plus years,” she said. In her third stint in South Africa, she feels UNAIDS’ advocacy work has paid off. Recalling a conversation she had in Zambia with the government when she worked there 15 years ago, many feared that the money and support would not come if countries started to offer antiretroviral medicines. “I made the case that money would come based on the countries’ growing commitment and that we would work to get the prices down,” she said. In 2005, prices for antiretroviral medicines were high. “The governments listened to us and to civil society and, based on solid results in 2015, it suddenly looked feasible to put an end to AIDS,” Ms Sozi said.

As the Regional Director for the eastern and southern Africa region, she is thrilled by the positive energy in the region, despite the many challenges remaining. “A lot still needs to be done to stop new HIV infections, get even more people on treatment and have them stay on treatment, and that includes testing even more adolescents, children and adults for HIV, including key populations,” she said. Another big issue involves tackling rampant sexual violence, which leads in part to higher numbers of new HIV infections among girls and young women, she explained.

“In this case, a biomedical response won’t help. We need to change how we relate to households, the police and the legal system and get faith leaders, women activists, nongovernmental organizations and men involved to turn things around,” Ms Sozi said. Trained as a doctor in Uganda, she admits that her career has propelled her into a much wider arena than she had ever anticipated.

“The UNAIDS women’s leadership programme empowered me to become a leader and reassured me that I could manage a large, diverse staff as well as resources and still be technically strong,” she said.

Her four years as the UNAIDS Country Director in China, before her latest move to South Africa, proved to be very enriching on a personal and professional level. “As a family we had a wonderful time in a country that is in itself so diverse in all aspects,” she said. The commitment by the government and civil society to work on the epidemic was both invigorating and challenging.

One of her biggest accomplishments in Asia was her contribution to the China–Africa health dialogue. “For me, to support the South–South dialogue on China–Africa health cooperation meant a lot,” Ms Sozi said. “I see myself as a facilitator of change.”


MORE IN THIS SERIES

UNAIDS staff share global experience on AIDS through criss-crossing the world

It’s about the people we serve: UNAIDS staff connecting the world

Feature Story

H6 commits to accelerate results for health

26 March 2018

The H6 combines the strengths of six international organizations to help countries to realize the United Nations Secretary-General’s Every Woman Every Child strategy. The partnership mobilizes political commitment and resources to transform societies so that women, children and adolescents can realize their rights to the highest attainable standards of health and well-being.

High-level representatives of the six organizations met in New York, United States of America, to shape a shared vision for the H6. During the meeting, which took place on 21 March, health leaders committed to jointly deliver more and faster results in countries.

The Chair of the H6, Michel Sidibé, shared his vision for the partnership, including how it can evolve to meet the demands of the Sustainable Development Goals, including in humanitarian settings, and be a leading platform to advance United Nations reform.

“As a transformative platform, I see the H6 as an outstanding opportunity to rapidly bring United Nations reform to life and deliver results for every woman, child and adolescent on the ground,” said Michel Sidibé, Executive Director of UNAIDS.

The participants were united in their ambition to make the H6 a one-stop shop for countries for strategic policy advice, technical assistance and strategic information. Adolescent health, particularly for 10–18-year-olds, was discussed as a key focus area.

“I see an effective H6 partnership as an important way to drive health impact at the country level for all children, including by better addressing gaps in services for the age group from 10 to18 years old, and by planting the seeds of development in humanitarian contexts,” said Henrietta Fore, the Executive Director of the United Nations Children’s Fund.

The participants also committed to ensure policy-making in which communities have a voice and decided to build innovative partnerships with stakeholders beyond the United Nations.

Enhanced transparency and accountability of the H6 and reducing fragmentation and duplication in the United Nations system, as well as between the United Nations and the World Bank, will be key to success, as will a strong focus on joint reporting of results. The H6 will also work in close collaboration with the Global Financing Facility and the Partnership for Maternal, Newborn & Child Health.

“The United Nations Population Fund is strongly committed to the H6 partnership, which has proven that working in close collaboration and bringing different expertise and experience to the table is not only effective in enabling countries to deliver quality care for the women and girls left furthest behind, but also ensures strong country ownership,” said Natalia Kanem, the Executive Director of the United Nations Population Fund.

The H6 principals will now develop a results framework and reconvene in May to review and endorse it. They are aiming to adopt a road map to roll out new ways of working by mid-year.

Feature Story

Using social media for a gender-transformative response to HIV

21 March 2018

During an event held on the sidelines of the 62nd Session of the Commission on the Status of Women, political leaders and activists from the women’s movement and HIV advocacy groups discussed new strategies to engage women and girls in the AIDS response.

Highlighting how technology and media, in particular social media, could be used to enhance the leadership of young women, the participants also discussed how to achieve gender equality in the AIDS response.

The meeting showcased the #WhatWomenWant campaign and how it used social media to mobilize for the United Nations General Assembly High-Level Meeting on Ending AIDS in 2016. As part of the campaign, a feminist blog series, a platform for young female leaders to share their expertise and priorities, was developed. Using WhatsApp groups and Twitter chats, young women were engaged and accessed information on the UNAIDS global guidance on comprehensive HIV prevention. The consultation and sharing using social media resulted in #WhatWomenWant: HIV prevention that works for adolescent girls and young women.

“We have a new generation of young women leaders who use social media to amplify and integrate a feminist leadership to ensure sustainable and transformative results in the AIDS response,” said Catherine Nyambura, from FEMNET, a regional organization of African feminists based in Kenya.

Also during the event, entitled Accountability in Action: Putting Women and Girls in all their Diversity at the Center Through New Social Media, a new report by the ATHENA Network—a global network of 70 partners in more than 35 countries dedicated to advancing gender equality, realizing human rights and building community leadership in the HIV response—was launched. #WhatWomenWant: a toolkit for putting accountability into action gives examples of how to effectively inform and engage young women through digital tools such as WhatsApp, Twitter and Facebook. It also aims to bring a gender-inclusive perspective into developing and implementing policies and programmes and to ensure that young women, including young women living with HIV, can access and contribute to these processes.

“We are looking to digital tools and technologies to evolve the monitoring and accountability agenda in the AIDS response. Our experience can now be shared globally and in real time, unlocking a new world of how we might learn together and deliver,” said Tyler Crone, from the ATHENA Network.

“UNAIDS welcomes the strengthened focus on accountability that has been generated through the #WhatWomenWant campaign. Together, we are committed to working hand in hand to enhance the meaningful participation of women, with a focus on making human rights and gender equality a reality at all levels of the AIDS response,” said Gunilla Carlsson, Deputy Executive Director of UNAIDS.

The meeting, held on 19 March at the United Nations Headquarters in New York, United States of America, was organized by UNAIDS in partnership with the ATHENA Network and #WhatWomenWant partners.

Feature Story

UNAIDS a top-nine gender-responsive organization

08 March 2018

UNAIDS has emerged as a top performer in the first Global Health 50/50 report.

Global Health 50/50, an initiative that monitors the gender-responsiveness of influential global health organizations, reviewed 140 major organizations working in or influencing global health. According to the new report, UNAIDS is among the top nine health organizations in the world.

Published on 8 March, International Women’s Day, the Global Health 50/50 report was inspired by a growing concern that too few global health organizations define, programme, resource or monitor gender in their work on health or in the workplace. The report aims to show both the challenges and the way forward.

The report shows that UNAIDS has not only policies that address gender, but also concrete and time-bound gender parity targets, as set out in its Gender Action Plan. Under the plan, UNAIDS has seen the proportion of female staff rise, so that women account for 54% of UNAIDS staff. And female leaders in the field are increasing, with women accounting for 48% of UNAIDS country directors, up from 27% in 2013.

“The Global Health 50/50 survey has shown that UNAIDS’ commitment to gender equality is strong. I am resolved to building on our results and achieving all the targets of the UNAIDS Gender Action Plan,” said Michel Sidibé, Executive Director of UNAIDS.

In addition to its commitment to gender equality and its workplace gender policy, UNAIDS was marked highly for having a definition of gender in its public statements, strategies or policies and having a programmatic gender strategy that seeks to improve health for everyone.

UNAIDS has long strived for gender equality and women’s empowerment, both within the UNAIDS Secretariat and elsewhere, and has recently started to review its practices and recommitted to ensuring adherence to them.

Guaranteeing the rights and empowerment of women and girls is not only a moral obligation, but a development imperative and a smart investment that safeguards the health of women and girls. Eliminating gender inequalities is one of the 10 Fast-Track commitments that Member States made at the 2016 United Nations General Assembly High-Level Meeting on Ending AIDS.

UNAIDS

The Joint United Nations Programme on HIV/AIDS (UNAIDS) leads and inspires the world to achieve its shared vision of zero new HIV infections, zero discrimination and zero AIDS-related deaths. UNAIDS unites the efforts of 11 UN organizations—UNHCR, UNICEF, WFP, UNDP, UNFPA, UNODC, UN Women, ILO, UNESCO, WHO and the World Bank—and works closely with global and national partners towards ending the AIDS epidemic by 2030 as part of the Sustainable Development Goals. Learn more at unaids.org and connect with us on Facebook, Twitter, Instagram and YouTube.

Global Health 50/50

Feature Story

Leveraging education to improve health and end AIDS

02 February 2018

During the Global Partnership for Education meeting on 2 February, hosted by Senegal and France, UNAIDS Executive Director Michel Sidibé discussed the importance of education and health. “Integrating education and health is key for our success in controlling the epidemic among young people. Without effective, quality and sustainable health and education systems we are failing young people”, Mr Sidibé said. Credit: UNAIDS/B. Deméocq.

The First Lady of Senegal, Marieme Faye Sall, and the First Lady of France, Brigitte Macron, inaugurate a cardio-paediatric centre that provides surgical treatment for children affected by cardiologic diseases. The centre, funded by the Cuomo Foundation in Monaco, supports women and children in Senegal. Credit: UNAIDS.

Preventing mother-to-child transmission of HIV is crucial, as is community involvement, stressed Mr Sidibé during his meeting with Ms Sall. The western and central Africa region lags behind in access to treatment and prevention, which is why UNAIDS and partners launched a western and central Africa catch-up plan. Credit: UNAIDS/B. Deméocq.

Mr Sidibé also met with the Minister of Health and Social Action of Senegal, Abdoulaye Diouf Sarr, stressing that no matter who you are or where you are from, everyone has the right to health, the right to an education, the right to equal opportunities and the right to thrive. Credit: UNAIDS/B. Deméocq.

The Secretary General of the Organisation Internationale de la Francophonie, Michaëlle Jean, will raise the issue of counterfeit medicines at the upcoming World Health Assembly in May. Credit: UNAIDS/B. Deméocq.

Minister of International Development of Norway, Nikolai Astrup, and Mr Sidibé met on the sidelines of the meeting. Credit: UNAIDS/B. Deméocq.

Mr Sidibé, along with the Ambassador of Luxembourg, Nicole Bintner. Luxembourg has been an active participant and donor in the western and central Africa catch-up plan. Credit: UNAIDS/B. Deméocq.

Good health enables a girl to thrive, to grow, to think, to explore and to contribute to her community. Knowledge of how to stay healthy and access to quality health services enable her to prevent illness, to eat well, to manage her sexual health, to have healthy babies when and if she chooses to and to nurture her own well-being. Education and health are two of the most transformative elements of a girl’s life. Credit: UNAIDS/B. Deméocq.

Update

Geneva international community unites to end violence against women and girls

30 November 2017

To galvanize joint action to end the epidemic of violence against women and girls, the African Women Ambassadors to the United Nations in Geneva and UNAIDS convened a special event on the eve of the International Day for the Elimination of Violence against Women and to kick off 16 Days of Activism.

The event, held on 24 November in UNAIDS’ headquarters in Geneva, Switzerland, was attended by more than 35 ambassadors to the United Nations in Geneva.

Interspersed with music originating from all corners of the world performed by pianist Layla Ramezan, the speakers spoke from diverse perspectives, both international and local.

The speakers emphasized that more than one in three (35%) women worldwide have experienced either physical and/or sexual violence in their lifetime and that, in some regions, women who are subjected to intimate partner violence are on average 1.5 times more likely to acquire HIV. Yet, according to the World Bank, 18 of 107 countries examined had no domestic violence legislation, and 45 had no legislation that specifically addresses sexual harassment. Every day, approximately 47 700 girls are married before their 18th birthday. In developing countries, one in every four girls is married before reaching age 18. One in nine is married under age 15, while an adolescent girl dies from violence every 10 minutes somewhere in the world.

Many also spoke about the importance of people, not numbers. They noted that the painful stories of women and girls facing violence must be shared, and breaking the cycle of violence is critical for achieving gender equality. The role of new technologies in perpetuating ancient injustices was emphasized and a powerful call was made for everyone to take action, whether calling out violence or harassment or speaking about it with family and friends.

The event concluded with a silent auction to raise funds for the African Women Ambassadors Fellowship Programme to support and empower young African women in international development and policy-making.

Quotes

“We know the facts and we should all be outraged. But it is not about numbers, it is about people. Every woman and every girl has a right to live with dignity, respect and free from violence.”

Michel Sidibé Executive Director, UNAIDS

“Eliminating gender inequality is key to addressing violence against women and girls. It is fundamentally a human rights issue.”

Rosemary McCarney Ambassador, Permanent Representative of Canada to the United Nations in Geneva

“We need to change attitudes and practices to achieve a world where women can live a life free of violence. Let’s orange the world!”

Yvette Stevens Ambassador, Permanent Representative of Sierra Leone to the United Nations in Geneva

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