Invest in Girls' Rights: Our Leadership, Our Well-being
This year, at a time when we are seeing a range of movements and actions to curtail girls’ and women’s rights and roll back progress on gender equality, we see particularly harsh impacts on girls. From maternal health care and parenting support for adolescent mothers, to digital and life skills training; from comprehensive sexuality education to survivor support services and violence prevention programmes; there is an urgent need for increased attention and resourcing for the key areas that enable girls to realize their rights and achieve their full potential.
Responding to girls’ calls for change, the global
community must move beyond reaffirming commitments and invest boldly in the
action needed to make that change. When we pay attention, we see that, already,
many girls are championing solutions and change in their communities. The
International Day of the Girl Child focuses attention on the need to address
the challenges girls face and to promote girls’ empowerment and the fulfilment
of their human rights.
Adolescent girls have the right to a safe, educated, and healthy life, not only during these critical formative years, but also as they mature into women. If effectively supported during the adolescent years, girls have the potential to change the world – both as the empowered girls of today and as tomorrow’s workers, mothers, entrepreneurs, mentors, household heads, and political leaders. An investment in realizing the power of adolescent girls upholds their rights today and promises a more equitable and prosperous future, one in which half of humanity is an equal partner in solving the problems of climate change, political conflict, economic growth, disease prevention, and global sustainability. Girls are breaking boundaries and barriers posed by stereotypes and exclusion, including those directed at children with disabilities and those living in marginalized communities. As entrepreneurs, innovators and initiators of global movements, girls are creating a world that is relevant for them and future generations.
The 2030 Agenda for Sustainable Development and its 17 Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs) adopted by world leaders in 2015, embody a roadmap for progress that is sustainable and leaves no one behind. Achieving gender equality and women’s empowerment is integral to each of the 17 goals. Only by ensuring the rights of women and girls across all the goals will we get to justice and inclusion, economies that work for all, and sustaining our shared environment now and for future generations.
Did you know?
·
Nearly 1 in 5 girls are still not completing
lower-secondary and nearly 4 in 10 girls are not completing upper-secondary
school today.
·
Around 90 per cent of adolescent girls and young women
do not use the internet in low-income countries, while their male peers are
twice as likely to be online.
·
Globally, girls aged 5-14 spend 160 million more
hours every day on unpaid care and domestic work than boys of the same age.
·
Adolescent girls continue to account for 3 in 4 new
HIV infections among adolescents.
·
Nearly 1 in 4 married/partnered adolescent girls aged
15-19 have experienced physical or sexual violence from an intimate partner at
least once in their lifetime.
Even before the COVID-19 pandemic, 100 million girls were at risk of child marriage in the next decade. And now over the next ten years, up to 10 million more girls worldwide will be at risk of marrying as children because of the COVID-19 pandemic
SUPPORT OUR PROJECT !
Email : communications@heeals.org
Whatss app : +91-7982316660
No comments:
Post a Comment