One of the Millennium Development Goals (MDGs) is to "promote gender equality and empower women." Goal Three of the MDGs makes sense because women and girls worldwide are almost always the least educated, the worst paid, and generally the most vulnerable members of the society.
"The goal of gender equality (...) remains unfulfilled, (...) with broad negative consequences, given that achieving the MDGs depends so much on women's empowerment and equal access by women to education, work, health care and decision-making," said UN Secretary-General Ban Ki-Moon in a 2012 report by the UN on the progress of the MDGs (which, remember, are due for achievement in 2015).
The report states that there has been advancement in most of the goals set in 2000, but notes, "Gender inequality persists and women continue to face discrimination in access to education, work and economic assets, and participation in government. Violence against women continues to undermine efforts to reach all goals."
I have been fortunate enough to have been granted a scholarship to attend the Women Deliver Conference in Malaysia in May, a conference organised around MDG Five–"to reduce maternal mortality and achieve universal access to reproductive health." Women Deliver, its Web site says: "is a global advocacy organisation bringing together voices from around the world to call for action against maternal death.
Launched at a groundbreaking 2007 conference, Women Deliver works globally to generate political commitment and financial investment for fulfilling (MDG Five)." The Conference's 2013 theme is Empowering Women and Girls.
I am one of three T&T women who will be attending the conference on scholarship; the other two are Ife Smith and Khadija Sinanan, both of whom are among the conference's 100 Young Leaders.
In an e-mail, Leah Sandals, senior associate of Global Health Strategies, an international consulting company that works with clients to ensure development and worldwide delivery of health products, technologies and information, quoting from the Women Deliver Web site, described the 100 Young Leaders as "a group of inspiring young people selected to receive scholarships to attend the conference, where they will have the opportunity to learn more about these issues and connect with experts from around the world."
Smith is an honorary member of the Family Planning Association of T&T's Youth Advocacy Movement and an executive member of the MSJ's Youth Social Justice arm. She is pursuing her master's in labour and employment relations at UWI, Cave Hill.
Sinanan will represent Advocates for Safe Parenthood: Improving Reproductive Equity (Aspire). "As a final year undergraduate student, studying law at UWI, Cave Hill, I was exposed to what was to be the single most engaging course of my legal education," Sinanan wrote to me in an e-mail.
"The course was gender and the law and it was lectured by Tracy Robinson under whose tutelage I was exposed to feminist legal theory and came to critically understand gendered issues in a way I had never before. I have since then volunteered with local civil rights group, Aspire, whose specific focus is on issues of maternal health, and I hope to continue to work with them in the future.
Through my interaction with Aspire, I came to understand more comprehensively the realities of Caribbean women and the need to advocate for improved sexual and reproductive health and rights for all Caribbean citizens."
Looking at the broad picture of life in T&T, one might justifiably ask what disadvantages women and girls endure. As a developing nation–some say developed, but that just depends on the part of the country in which you live–we have many women in positions of power, many women who are high achievers in all industries and areas of national life, from religion to sport, education, politics and business.
However, our HIV epidemic still has its highest rate of new infections among young women, women are still paid less than men in equivalent positions, and women are still more likely to die as a result of intimate violence than men.
Additionally, we still have an unacceptably high rate of maternal mortality. Dr Bharat Bassaw, consultant obstetrician and gynaecologist at Mt Hope, was quoted in an October 2012 article in the T&T Guardian as saying: "If 100,000 women are pregnant, we expect 60 or 70 to die. This is very, very high. In the United Kingdom you can expect approximately one woman in 100,000 to die."
Women Deliver, at which 5,000 women from around the world will meet to deliberate on problems and solutions, is a step in the right direction and I am honoured to be a part of it.