United
Nations, Oct 16: Women and girls are central to the sustainability of
rural households and communities, improving rural livelihoods and overall
wellbeing, but their role and significance is often overlooked, the head of the
United Nations entity for women's empowerment has said. In her statement for
International Day of Rural Women – marked annually on 15 October – Executive
Director of UN Women Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka noted that women farmers were “just
as productive and enterprising” as male counterparts, but often lack equal
access to land, credit, agricultural inputs, markets and high-value agrifood
chains. “Rural women are highly capable and knowledgeable custodians of their
land, and can move further ahead to more fully and effectively participate in
green value chains, including by profitably and sustainably linking rural and
urban markets,” Ms Mlambo-Ngcuka said. Globally, women comprise 43 per cent of
the agricultural workforce, according to UN figures, with smallholder
agriculture farmers producing nearly 80 per cent of food in Asia and
sub-Saharan Africa and support the livelihoods of some 2.5 billion people.
According to estimates, closing the gender gap in access to land and other
productive assets could increase agricultural outputs by up to 20 per cent in
Africa. Noting this year's theme for the Day, which focuses on opportunities
and challenges in climate-resistant agriculture, the head of UN Women called
for more training and skills development for rural women and girls so that they
can play a greater role in the development of green food and agricultural value
chains. In addition, she highlighted the role that women farmers can play in
protecting biodiversity through the use of indigenous crops and agro-ecological
farming methods that are environmentally friendly and free of toxic chemicals.
All this relies on the governments, however, “providing the social and physical
infrastructure that enables rural women's participation in sustainable,
climate-resilient agricultural production, processing, transport and
marketing.” But she stressed that life in a rural setting should not
automatically lead to agriculture. “Rural girls have an equal right to their
urban peers to a good education, careers in STEM and a thriving role in the
digital revolution,” Ms Mlambo-Ngcuka said referring to the acronym for
vocations related to science, technology, engineering and mathematics. She
added that girls should also not automatically end up in unpaid positions
caring for family members. “Only once these inequalities are purposefully
levelled, will both women and girls, whether rural or urban, be able to take
their place at the heart of the achievement of the Sustainable Development
Goals, and the growth of a better future for us all,” the senior UN official
said. International Day of Rural Women is marked one day before World Food Day,
which will focus this year on investing in food security and rural development
in the context of migration, and on 17 October, the International Day for the
Eradication of Poverty. UNI
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