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Middle East Gender Equality Gets a Boost with New Gender Parity Group
Contact: Fon Mathuros, Communications Department, World Economic Forum, E-mail: fmathuro@weforum.org,
Sharm El Sheikh, Egypt, 19 May 2008 – Fifty influential female and male leaders have formed a Middle East Gender Parity Group to tackle discrimination and close the gap between the sexes. “This is the Middle East’s first high-level group of both female and male decision-makers working together to achieve gender equality in the workplace, education, politics and health, and to better engage the talent of the region’s female population,” said Saadia Zahidi, Head of the World Economic Forum’s Women Leaders and Gender Parity Programme. At their founding meeting, members envisaged a scenario of the Middle East in 2020 that is free of gender gaps. To reach that goal in 12 years’ time, they made the following recommendations and committed to review progress at the next World Economic Forum on the Middle East: Middle East Gender Parity Group members include Hosna Rachid, Chairperson, Rachid Mashreq Group, Egypt; Ibrahim Dabdoub, Chief Executive Officer, National Bank of Kuwait; Randa Ayoubi, Chief Executive Officer, Rubicon, Jordan; Amre Moussa, Secretary-General, League of Arab States; Youssuf Boutros-Ghali, Minister of Finance of Egypt; Saeb Erekat, Head of Negotiations Department, PLO, Palestinian National Authority, Palestinian Territories; Suhair Al Ali, Minister of Planning and International Cooperation of the Hashemite Kingdom of Jordan. “The concrete steps we should take today are to develop our legislations to protect women’s rights, create awareness among our people, and, yes, political will is very important to empower women, but we need social support also,” said Lubna Qassim, Executive Director, Legal and Regulatory Affairs, Dubai Council for Economic Affairs, United Arab Emirates. Countries from the Middle East region hold some of the lowest positions on the World Economic Forum’s Global Gender Gap Report that ranks over 120 countries according to the size of their gender gaps on educational attainment, health and survival, political empowerment, and economic participation and opportunity. The Report reveals that while great progress has been made in the areas of health and education in the Middle East, female talent is not well integrated into the economy or into political decision-making. Incorporated as a foundation in 1971, and based in Geneva, Switzerland, the World Economic Forum is impartial and not-for-profit; it is tied to no political, partisan or national interests (http://www.weforum.org). |
