News headlines for “Women’s Rights”, page 9

  1. 50 Years On: Lebanon’s Civil War, Feminist Peacebuilding, and the Fight Against Silence

    - Inter Press Service

    BENGALURU, India, September 8 (IPS) - This year marks half a century since the start of Lebanon’s civil war in 1975 – a conflict that lasted 15 years, killed over 150,000 lives, and resulted in as many as 17,000 missing. Decades later, the legacy of that war is still everywhere: in the silence of classrooms without history books, in families who never knew what happened to their missing loved ones, and in violence made mundane in all parts of society.

  2. Leadership of women crucial to UN’s reinvention at 80, says former Assembly President

    - UN News

    Since the creation of the United Nations 80 years ago, only four women have served as President of the General Assembly, where all 193 UN Member States debate the key issues facing the world.

  3. UN Mobilizes Amid Cascading Earthquakes in Eastern Afghanistan, Aiming to ‘Build Back Better’

    - Inter Press Service

    UNITED NATIONS, September 5 (IPS) - United Nations aid organizations are rallying after a series of earthquakes and powerful aftershocks wreaked unprecedented havoc across eastern Afghanistan—particularly in the mountainous provinces of Kunar and Nangarhar.

  4. The missing half: The urgent need for more women’s representation in the media

    - UN News

    Women make up half of the world’s population but receive only 26 per cent of media coverage, according to the latest UN-backed Global Media Monitoring Project (GMMP) report, the world’s largest study on gender representation in news media.

  5. Afghan Women to the International Community: Real Action, Not Mere Sympathy or Words of Condemnation

    - Inter Press Service

    KABUL, September 3 (IPS) - This year marks the fourth anniversary of the Taliban retaking power in Afghanistan. All these years have been one long nightmare for  the women of Afghanistan, the ones who have borne the brunt of oppression – arguably the worst of its kind anywhere in the world.

  6. From Matriarchy to Victims: An Ongoing Story of Indigenous Women in Canada

    - Inter Press Service

    TORONTO, September 2 (IPS) - If European colonialism had never happened in Canada, matriarchy would still have been strong in Indigenous culture.

  7. ‘Who Will Take the Mic at the United Nations When Doing so Might Cost Them Their Freedom?’

    - Inter Press Service

      CIVICUS discusses civil society’s challenges in engaging with United Nations (UN) processes with an activist from a Salvadoran queer-led organisation who asked to remain anonymous for security reasons.

  8. Despite Taliban ban, over 90 per cent of Afghans support girls’ right to learn

    - UN News

    Despite the ongoing ban on girls’ secondary education, more than 90 per cent of Afghan adults support girls’ right to be in class, according to a new alert from the UN’s gender equality agency, UN Women.

  9. The Right to Care: A Feminist Legal Victory That Could Change the Americas

    - Inter Press Service

    MONTEVIDEO, Uruguay, August 28 (IPS) - On 7 August, the Inter-American Court of Human Rights delivered a groundbreaking decision that could transform women’s lives across the Americas. For the first time in international law, an international tribunal recognised care as an autonomous human right. Advisory Opinion 31/25, issued in response to a request from Argentina, elevates care – long invisible and relegated to the private sphere – to the level of a universal enforceable entitlement.

  10. Hypertension and Diabetes Grows Among India’s Poor Communities

    - Inter Press Service

    MANN, India, August 26 (IPS) - Generally thought to be diseases of the wealthier classes, non-communicable diseases (NCDs) like hypertension and diabetes are on the rise among India’s underprivileged working classes in semi-urban and rural sprawls.

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