Subject: [fem-women2000 419] Re: Women 2000 Media Analysis / $B=w@-(B 2000$BG/2q5D%a%G%#%"$NJsF;>u67J,@O(B
From: lalamaziwa <lalamaziwa@jca.apc.org>
Date: Sun, 25 Jun 2000 10:07:19 +0900
Seq: 419

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> > > (<http://www.womenaction.org/ungass/multimedia.html>). At the center of
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$B!http://www.womensenews.org>), which included a series of by-line pieces
by guest authors; Women.com
(<http://www.women.com/news/features/f0605un.html>); Lifetime Television
for Women (http://www.lifetimetv.com/about/trophy/bejing_plus5.html
<http://www.lifetimetv.com>) and WomenAction 2000
(<http://www.womenaction.org/ungass/multimedia.html>). At the center of
the online press was a vibrant Internet cafe operated by WomenAction 2000,
where women from around the world sent and received stories and shared
information with one another.

In summary, media coverage of Women 2000 was extremely positive except for
a handful of outlets. It included substantive review of U.N. negotiations
and NGO activities, highlighting women's progress in various countries and
continuing challenges since Beijing. Some stories left readers with
questions about the review process and what the "next steps' might be, but
overall the event generated the most coverage women's rights has received
in a long while, and put the issue on the radar screens of many reporters
and news outlets.

DID YOU KNOW?

* During the conference, Saudi Arabia announced that it would sign the
Convention on the Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women
(CEDAW), as reported in Edith Lederer's Associated Press piece, "Women
Seek Action After U.N. Meeting."

* A Village Voice piece June 20 reported that 1,200 journalists
covered Beijing+5.

* The Associated Press covered a new UNICEF report, "Domestic Violence
Against Women and Girls," which revealed that 60 million fewer women are
alive today than would be expected by examining demographic trends.
Sex-selective abortion, killing of infant girls and lack of access to food
and medicine were some factors reported to cause the discrepancy.

* NPR reported that although the Beijing Platform for Action seeks to
increase the number of women elected officials from 10 percent to 30
percent of the worldwide total, the global average today is only 13
percent. The Washington Post reported that of 100 countries examined
specifically, the level of elected women ranged from Sweden's admirable
42.7 percent down to an abysmal 3.8 percent in the Arab states. The United
States ranked 50th.

COVERAGE BEFORE THE U.N. SPECIAL SESSION

The first stories focused on two new U.N. reports and a new documentary
film. Findings from the U.N. Statistics Division's report The World's
Women 2000 and a new UNICEF report, "Domestic Violence Against Women and
Girls," were featured May 30-June 1 by the Associated Press, Reuters, The
New York Times, Chicago Tribune, and The Record (NJ). According to the AP,
the World's Women 2000 report "called on governments to revise laws to
ensure women's equal rights, to provide equal education for girls and
ensure the right of women to decide matters of sexual and reproductive
health," to put women in top decision-making positions, and to end
violence against them. The Tribune looked at women's devastating AIDS
statistics and abuses of women refugees, African women's short life
expectancies, and the "glass ceiling" in business and politics. According
to the Times the UNICEF report found that ''violence against women and
girls continues to be a global epidemic" and that "statistics are grim" in
every nation.

A May 30 Associated Press story on the Jane Fonda documentary "Realities
of Girls' Lives: How We Can Act Now" noted that the Platform for Action
"set an ambitious goal of achieving full equality between women and men"
and "spelled out objectives in a dozen critical areas." The May 30 USA
Today, May 31 NBC Today Show, and June 1 Chicago Sun-Times also reported
on the actor-activist's 14-minute film, which examines the lives of
Nigerian girls, focusing on teen pregnancy. In the "Today Show" interview,
Fonda described her visit to Nigeria as a way to draw attention to
Beijing+5. In the USA Today article she was quoted as saying, "You cannot
alleviate poverty and you cannot create sustainable development if you
don't improve the lives of women."

The early coverage included a major profile in The New York Times May 31
of Charlotte Bunch of the Center for Women's Global Leadership. The
"Public Lives" feature said her mission was to build "a worldwide network
of feminists who will press their local governments to end violence
against women, be it genital mutilation in Africa, bride burning in India,
honor killing in the Middle East or rape on the battlefields of Bosnia."
CNN interviewed Angela King, U.N. special adviser on gender issues, on the
same day. Then, a Religion News Service story printed May 27 in the
Cleveland Plain Dealer reported on the challenge by Catholics for a Free
Choice to the observer status of the Holy See at the U.N.

COVERAGE DURING THE SPECIAL SESSION: SERIES

The Associated Press, The New York Times, Pittsburgh Post-Gazette/Toledo
Blade, ABC World News Tonight, National Public Radio, CNN, Lifetime
Television for Women and Oxygen Cable Network all provided extensive
coverage of the special session, NGO activity, and the impact of the
Platform for Action on women's lives around the world.

The Associated Press ran at least 15 stories on Women 2000, and they were
picked up by news outlets nationwide: the Chicago Tribune, The Buffalo
News, The Commercial Appeal (Memphis, TN), Dayton Daily News (Dayton, OH),
The Record (Bergen County, NJ), Telegraph Herald, (Dubuque, IA), The
Deseret News (Salt Lake City, UT), and the Ventura County Star (CA) among
dozens of other outlets around the country.

On June 2 and 3, AP summarized conference history and quoted Charlotte
Bunch as saying the biggest achievement since Beijing "is that women are
really on the agenda." She also noted "a backlash against women's
visibility and against women pushing the boundaries of the issues."

Another AP story described First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton's speech to a
standing-room-only crowd of 1,500, where she saluted microcredit loan
programs set up in Beijing to assist "100 million of the world's poorest
families." She cited advances since the 1995 Beijing conference: new laws
in many countries raising the legal age for marriage, banning female
genital mutilation, criminalizing domestic violence and recognized rape as
a war crime. (The Washington Post, United Press International, The New
York Post, and Newsday reported June 6 on Clinton's speech.) The AP
reported on the Women 2000 Economic Empowerment Forum, where Linda
Tarr-Whelan, U.S. Ambassador to the U.N. Commission on the Status of
Women, summed up the session this way: "We have to make the case that
economies cannot thrive without women as full partners."

On June 7, the AP reported on efforts to encourage male involvement in
advancing the Platform for Action. The piece focused on the Canada-based
White Ribbon Campaign, which urges men to wear a white ribbon as a pledge
never to commit or condone violence against women and never to be silent
about violence they witness. The Atlanta Journal Constitution ran a June
11 story quoting Dr. Robert Hatcher, a professor of obstetrics and
gynecology at Emory University in Atlanta: "Improving the status of women
has to include men - husbands, boyfriends, physicians and political
leaders."

The AP also reported on the Women's Environment and Development
Organization (WEDO) launch of a campaign for gender equality in government
by 2005. June Zeitlin, executive director of WEDO, was quoted as saying,
"If government won't commit, the women will, and we're going to hold them
to it."

Several AP stories reported on the argument among women's rights
activists, the Vatican and some Islamic and Catholic countries about who
was preventing consensus on a U.N. document that would accelerate the
drive for equality of the sexes. Gita Sen, professor at the Indian
Institute of Management and head of a grassroots women's group, said many
countries were ready to reaffirm the Platform. Listing those stalling the
final agreement-the Vatican, Nicaragua, Libya, Sudan and Iraq-Sen said,
"We hope that this hard core will move so that the tyranny of this
miniscule minority can be ended."

The AP reported that Austin Ruse, president of the Catholic Family and
Human Rights Institute, said "the real reason this document is not
finished is because of radical language being pushed by rich western
states and that they are attempting to spread immorality to the developing
world in a new kind of sexual colonialism." The stories reported that
several key officials expressed concern over the lack of consensus. U.S.
Secretary of State Madeleine Albright voiced the sentiments of many when
she said that the session "obliges us to chart a path that will lead to
ever more rapid progress in the new century."

Reporting on final results, the AP noted that the conference, scheduled to
end on Friday afternoon, did not end until Saturday evening when the
delegates from 180 countries reached consensus. Angela King said members
"now have a clearly defined roadmap for the continuing journey toward
gender equality." Measures were added to combat domestic violence, sex
trafficking, and the impact of globalization on women. AP's last story on
June 13 said that participants were heading home "determined to stop
making speeches and start taking action."

The New York Times continued its coverage with a June 6 story that focused
on Hillary Clinton's appearance at a UNIFEM meeting and the adoration she
received there. A Wisconsin Capital Times piece on June 13 similarly
reported on Hillary's popularity with the crowd. The New York Times also
reported that Gita Sen, a development expert from India, warned that the
Women 2000 conference, like the one in Beijing, "was in danger of sinking
into arid debate over definitions and intentions. This meeting is intended
to look for ways to move ahead, not to reopen debate on the issues."

On June 7, the Times did a featured piece on a new poll commissioned by
the Aspen Institute's "Women's Lens" project on women's global views,
which was released during the special session. At a press conference about
the new poll, U.S. Congressional representatives Carolyn Maloney, Joseph
Crowley and Barbara Lee discussed the importance of building a U.S
constituency for global issues.  For copies of the poll, visit
<http://www.women2000newsroom.org/poll.pdf>. The Times quoted Women's Lens
director Joan Dunlop as saying, "What this poll tells us is that American
women understand that the well-being of themselves, their families and
communities are increasingly intimately connected with the well-being and
stability of other countries."  According to the Times, the poll,
conducted by Belden Russonello & Stewart, found that 69 percent of women
sampled said global problems necessitated a close relationship between the
U.S. and international organizations like the U.N.

Also on June 7, the Times reported on performance artist Sarah Jones, who
appeared in a one-woman show commissioned by Equality Now to focus
attention on laws that discriminate against women.

The June 8 Times piece described Egypt as a "pivotal" country on women's
rights and included quotes from the Egyptian first lady and Beijing+5
attendee Suzanne Mubarak. The Times reported, "Since the Cairo and Beijing
conferences, Egypt has outlawed genital cutting of girls and revised its
civil code to make it easier for a woman to obtain a divorce, and has
expanded and clarified women's rights in family law."

A June 11 Times article, "After the Fall, Traffic In Flesh, Not Dreams,"
focused on women's often desperate situation in formerly communist
countries, and on activists against forced prostitution: "Selma Gasi, 20,
an activist with the Women to Women group in Bosnia, tells a particularly
chilling tale of pimps, accompanied by older women, scouring the
war-devastated villages, ostensibly for sitters or housemaids, and taking
girls as young as 14 to strip-dancing bars where they become prostitutes."


Also on June 11, a New York Times News Service article about the end of
the conference, which ran in several papers, quoted Angela King as saying,
"I'm very happy that the dire predictions that there would be a rollback
have proved false... We were determined to get a strong document that did
not in any way diminish the gains women had achieved in Beijing. We were
also determined to go beyond Beijing, and we did, despite the efforts of
countries that made the process such an arduous one." United Press
International ran a similar story on June 10.

The Pittsburgh Post-Gazette/Toledo Blade ran a front-page series of
stories in both papers June 4-10 discussing the 12 "areas of concern" of
the Platform for Action. The series opened on June 4 with a history of the
Beijing Conference and details of a  "report card" from U.S. Women
Connect: in which the United States received a failing grade on addressing
women and poverty and a 'B' grade for increasing women in power and
decision-making. CNN and ABC News covered the report card as well. Another
Post-Gazette article June 4 focused on local women who had attended the
Beijing gathering, the influence it had on their professional and personal
lives and the importance of a global approach to women's rights.

Other Post-Gazette stories during the week focused on women and poverty,
rape as a weapon of war, sex trafficking, violence against women,
education, the media, and the girl child. The series concluded June 10
with a piece that said the special session "made no bold, new steps on the
road to gender equality because of basic disagreements over abortion, the
need to change cultural patterns of behavior between men and women,
whether there are 'sexual rights' [and] the extent of government
involvement in family planning." In spite of this, the story found that
the special session also did not retreat from the goals set in Beijing.
(The full series can be read at
<http://www.post-gazette.com/headlines/20000610beijing1.asp>.)

ABC World News Tonight broadcast stories June 2-9 on issues including
honor killings, Egyptian women's right to a divorce, women's position in
politics, and HIV/AIDS transmission among African women. The network
opened its coverage by interviewing Charlotte Bunch. She noted "an amazing
amount of solidarity that's going on now amongst women's groups," where
women worldwide will write letters to protest outrages done to other women
anywhere. The profile can be found at
<http://www.abcnews.go.com/onair/WorldNewsTonight/wnt000602_21st_bunch_fea
ture.html>.

On June 5, ABC reported on domestic violence worldwide, focusing on
violence in the name of honor that continues to occur in the Middle East.
The report showed the brutality of these crimes and that some protests
have caused changes. Pakistan's President Pervez Musharraf promised to
"treat honor killings as murder." The king of Jordan vowed to "end the
practice." Also on June 5, ABC broadcast a piece on Hillary Clinton,
including excerpts from her conference speech on women's need "to be
engaged in politics" and from her address on the importance of microcredit
loans to women.

On June 6, World News Tonight ran a piece about women's networks that help
new entrepreneurs raise capital. Catherine Muther, founder of Women's
Technology Cluster, said, "If you don't have access to that network of
relationships, you're not going to be successful in getting the referrals
that introduce you to sources of capital." Also on June 6, the network
reported on liberalized divorce laws in Egypt, where until recently women
had no right to divorce even if they were victims of domestic violence.
The broadcast concluded with examples in China and Nigeria of ways the
Platform for Action has made a difference in many women's lives, and noted
that 10 million poor women have received loans from the World Bank to
start small businesses. The report also reflected the lack of progress in
some areas, such as the few number of women elected to office.

For part of the ABC coverage see
<http://www.abcnews.go.com/onair/DailyNews/wntbeijing000605.html>.

National Public Radio (NPR) ran five stories about Women 2000 on separate
days. On June 5, Morning Edition focused on the findings of the World Bank
report on women and interviewed its co-author Elizabeth King. The story
showed that while girls' primary education has advanced in some areas,
infanticide, abortion, and neglect are still major problems in South Asia
and China. The following day, All Things Considered featured an interview
with Charlotte Bunch, who emphasized the conference's "mixed verdict" on
women's rights. Bunch cited positive changes such as laws barring violence
against women but also noted backlash in countries like Afghanistan. She
asserted that the four conferences on women "have without question
advanced the women's movement internationally."

On June 9, NPR's All Things Considered listed the "ambitious goals" set in
Beijing, noting that "Women 2000" still faced the same obstacles:
opposition to sexual and reproductive rights by Catholic and Muslim
countries. The piece included soundbites from Madeleine Albright and
Hillary Clinton and mentioned the conference goal of electing women to be
30 percent of legislatures worldwide. (Story online at
<http://www.npr.org/ramfiles/atc/20000609.atc.17.ram>).

On June 10, NPR's Weekend Edition ran an interview with Joanna Foster,
head of Women in Law and Development in Africa, and Jocelyn Dow, president
of the Women's Environment and Development Organization (WEDO) about plans
for action after "Women 2000." They called it an "international
commitment" and a "mobilizing tool" for women's rights In the future,
international conferences will likely be organized by women's
organizations themselves due to a lack of enthusiasm from the U.N. and the
U.S. Congress, they said. (Story online at
<http://www.npr.org/ramfiles/wesat/20000610.wesat.02.ram>.)
On June 11, Weekend Edition did a story on WEDO and its campaign to
increase women's numbers in government, "50-50 by 2005: Get the Balance
Right!" Margaret Alva of India's parliament praised the effects of
bringing a million women into politics at the local level. The story noted
that the United States trails other countries in the "50-50" effort
because of U.S. "distaste for quotas, the electoral system, the money
needed for campaigns." (Story online at
<http://www.npr.org/ramfiles/atc/20000609.atc.17.ram>.)

CNN's June 3 introduction said "most of the world's nations were going to
step toward equal rights for women in 1995." It included quotes from
special advisor Angela King, Faizo Mohamed of Equality Now, and
Secretary-General Kofi Annan, who said a nation that denies women cannot
reach its full potential. Another June 3 piece discussed violence against
women. On June 4 CNN focused on a human rights symposium the day before
the U.N. special session began, including an interview with symposium
sponsor Charlotte Bunch of the Center for Women's Global Leadership. It
described the Center as "at the forefront of a worldwide movement to end
abuse like domestic violence, genital circumcision, and bride burning."
The piece included an interview with Mary Robinson, U.N. High Commission
for Human Rights, who said that the "few that don't want progress are very
effective, and that's a problem."

June 6 and 7 stories provided general scenes from the conference, then
zeroed in on issues including violence, sex trafficking, globalization,
women's health, education, and the workplace. Kofi Annan, Hillary Clinton,
and Lt. General Claudia Kennedy were featured. CNN.com posted a story on
June 10 showing a table of "key points" from the outcome document and
reporting on agreements the delegates reached, as well as the impasses.
This and other online stories on Women 2000 can be found at
<http://www.cnn.com/2000/US/06/10/un.women.03/index.html>.

On June 5, Lifetime Television for Women covered the conference with an
emphasis on the Women 2000 Film Festival, showing several clips. A June 6
story outlined women's advances since Beijing and included quotes from
Gertrude Mongella, former secretary of the U.N. World Conference on Women;
Dr. Jane Smith, President and CEO of the National Council of Negro Women;
Congressman Joseph Crowley (D-NY); and others. Another story that day
covered domestic violence with an example of a woman whose boss and
co-workers protected her from an abusive boyfriend. The full story is
found at lifetimetv.com.

June 7's Lifetime report examined poverty and AIDS for women worldwide,
and featured an interview with Donna Shalala. Finally, a story on June 8
interviewed members of Girls, Inc., at the conference. With Isabel Carter
Stewart, the executive director, they discussed sexism in the world and in
their own education.

On June 5, Oxygen Cable Network ran a story focusing on progress since
Beijing, featuring Angela King talking about governments' accountability
and Jane Fonda saying she wanted to work toward peace. The June 6 report
centered on Fonda, her participation in the Beijing and New York
conferences, and her recent Nigerian girls documentary. The June 7 story
discussed genital mutilation in Africa, giving a graphic description of
the process. A second story on June 7 looked at the $6,000 discrepancy
between men's and women's salaries and the high rate of violence and
sexual assault against women. It cited the Society for Research and
Women's Health report that drugs are usually tested on men rather than
women. On June 8 Oxygen concentrated on the plight of women in
Afghanistan, where women trying to flee Islamic extremism are often
killed. On June 9, Oxygen returned viewers to Jane Fonda and her issues of
female education and sexual equality in Nigeria.

COVERAGE DURING THE SPECIAL SESSION: REGULAR NEWS COVERAGE

Most news outlets featured the conference, usually in one story about the
opening and the background of the Platform for Action, then with another
on struggles between conservatives and progressives, or a wrap-up piece,
or both.

Broadcast Coverage:

NBC Nightly News June 5 did a short background piece on the conference and
included a soundbite from Secretary-General Kofi Annan about the work that
remains to be done on violence.

CBS broadcast a story about Iranian women's "small steps toward equality,"
on June 4. The piece portrayed the nation as resisting women's equality in
part by making women wear the head-to-foot black chador. One Iranian man
said, "This is a religion. ...We cannot change it." The piece emphasized
how the younger generation is pushing the limits. An unidentified woman
said many young women show a glimpse of jeans or sneakers under their
black chador and go to parties with men. The piece concluded, "Iranian
women are settling for evolution rather than revolution."

On June 5, opening day of the conference, CBS Morning News interviewed
Angela King and Health and Human Services Secretary Donna Shalala on goals
of the conference and the 12 areas of concern. King explained that
non-governmental organizations and women's groups have a powerful
influence in the effort to achieve gender equality. Shalala focused on the
U.S. agenda, explaining that "raising women's education and women's health
around the world is in our self-interest, not simply because markets will
open up. It's in our moral interest as a major leader in the world."

Other broadcast and cable coverage of Women 2000 included MSNBC Cable, FOX
News, "Good Morning America" (ABC), and daily live two-hour talk shows by
Wisconsin Public Radio.

Newspaper and Wire Reports:

The Christian Science Monitor piece on June 8 focused on violence against
women: "The subjects of discussion are dark, and often dire. 'Honor'
killings. Rape. Domestic violence. Forced marriage. Dismal pay. But the
confidence and energy exuded by some 10,000 women gathered at the U.N.
this week is palpable." As an example of victories, the article said,
"women advocacy organizations successfully lobbied in 1998 for the
inclusion of rape as a crime against humanity in the statute for an
international criminal court." A June 12 article focused on a peace
symposium and reported, "From Colombia to Russia, virtually every conflict
zone has a growing movement of mothers fighting against war." (The story
is available at http://www.csmonitor.com/durable/2000/06/12/index.html.)

The Chicago Tribune ran a June 9 article enumerating abuses that have not
improved since Beijing, such as trafficking in sex, slave labor and
genital mutilation. The story emphasized the frustration of the
conference's participants at the "tedious process of drafting a unified
plan of action" and spoke of the "difficult struggle" with language and
with government implementation

A June 9 Washington Post story reported that only eight countries have
lived up to the commitment made by governments in Beijing to increase
women's share of parliamentary positions to 30 percent. Mu Sochua, head of
the Cambodian ministry of women's and veteran's affairs, said she hoped to
find a new generation of female politicians before her nation's first
election in 30 years. This story is online at
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A25927-2000Jun8.html>.

Another Post story on June 10 reported on the dispute over women's sexual
and reproductive rights that delayed the final agreement. Francoise
Gerard, a public health expert for the International Women's Health
Coalition, explained, "We want full and equal access of adolescents to
sexual and reproductive health education and services, while the
conservatives' position is that adolescents should just say no." The
agreement reached "calls for the eradication of harmful customary or
traditional practices" against women. This story can be found at
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A30640-2000Jun9.html>. A
second June 10 Post story elaborated on the progress women have made in
increasing their participation in national parliaments since Beijing. This
story is available online at
<http://www.washingtonpost.com/wp-dyn/articles/A33011-2000Jun10.html>.

The New York City Village Voice ran an introductory piece on June 6 that
described the upcoming conference, stressed the important role of NGOs,
and listed several NGO-sponsored events as "Highlights from Beijing+5."
They included the human rights symposium, the Women 2000 Film Festival,
and a performance called "Women Can't Wait" by Equality Now and Sarah
Jones.

In a June 10 story, Reuters reported that at the start of the Women 2000
conference, some participants were worried that the "final outcome might
be "Beijing-Minus-Five"-a retreat from bold goals set forth after the
massive China conference in 1995." A Los Angeles Times story on June 6
similarly reported that Amnesty International Secretary-General Pierre
Sane accused Algeria, Libya, Pakistan and the Vatican of playing "a very
destructive role" in negotiations on a forward-looking document, as they
had in Beijing. However, Reuters quoted a U.S. official who said gains
were made on violence against women and "health provisions." The Reuters
story is available at
http://www.desnews.com/cgi-bin/libstory_reg?dn00&0006120128.

The Buffalo News ran a June 3 article on an economic report by the United
Nations Development Fund for Women (UNIFEM), which "points out that in an
era of shrinking government budgets, corporations are having a greater
impact on the lives of women" and "Globalization intensifies some of the
existing inequalities and insecurities for poor women."

The Washington Times focused on sex workers in a front-page June 7
article, "U.S. Seeks Softer Stance On Hookers; Clinton-Led Agenda Weakens
Porn Curb." A June 9 piece, "U.S. Move Regarding Sex Trade Draws Ire," is
available online at
http://www.washtimes.com/national/default-20006923746.htm. A June 12
article, "Feminist Proposals Routed At Conference" (available at
http://www.washtimes.com/national/default-200061222282.htm), quoted Austin
Ruse, president of the Catholic Family and Human Rights Institute in New
York, and stated, "Conservative nations routed liberal and radical
feminists at the finale of a U.N. special session on women's rights over
the weekend, forcing Western powers to drop homosexual rights, sex rights
for children and promotion of abortion from a new five-year U.N. agenda
for women's advancement."

However, the Washington Times' final story also reported that the session
"ended with the adoption of a document reiterating, among other things,
that better education and health care are key to improving women's lives.
It also called for universal primary and secondary education for boys and
girls."

A June 12 Newsweek International story reported that since Beijing, women
across the Arab world have become better educated, more aware of their
rights and readier to use them. Last year Qatari women gained the right to
vote; some even ran for office, though none won.

FOLLOW-UP COVERAGE

Newsweek's June 19 interview with Nana Konadu Rawlings, the first lady of
Ghana and founder of the 31 December Women's Movement, quoted Rawlings as
saying, "It is clear that if a country's women are empowered, then the
economic indices also are moving up, because it is the women who take care
of their children, health, [and] education. If you leave the women far
behind, no matter how high you push the men up, the indices will remain at
the bottom." The interview ("Raising Women's Voices") is available at
http://newsweek.com/nw-srv/printed/int/wa/a20967-2000jun11.htm

The Village Voice ran four articles about Women 2000 in its June 20
edition. One focused on Linda Tarr-Whelan, U.S. ambassador to the U.N.
Commission on the Status of Women, and the "fight to expand feminist gains
at the U.N.'s special session on women." Tarr-Whelan was quoted as saying,
"Women's rights have moved into the mainstream of government foreign
policy and we have to be sure to keep it there." She credited the
"strength of the international women's movement, particularly the NGOs"
with advancing women's rights.

Other Village Voice articles on June 20 focused on young women at the
conference; a feminist panel on the global economy, which discussed the
ways globalization has "aggravated inequalities for women"; and the way
the conference encouraged women to embrace technology by "offering
discussions that ranged from women's role in the new economy to ways
technology can help the world's poorest women get small bank loans." (The
Village Voice coverage can be found at
<http://www.villagevoice.com/issues/0022/gonnerman.shtml>.)

In its June 26 edition, The Nation reported, "If at Beijing the dominant
mood was one of excitement at the prospects for mainstreaming global
feminism, in New York it's mostly wariness." The story addressed
indicators of progress and lack thereof on women's rights, then focused on
the struggle between the Vatican and those opposing its observer status:
"What can you do? Join the 541 women's and human rights groups that
support the See Change campaign of Catholics for a Free Choice. The
Catholic Church should be welcome to apply for NGO status and lobby to its
heart's content but not to sit at the negotiating table and endlessly
stall and shred the delicate consensus process."

EDITORIALS AND OPINION ARTICLES

Many news outlets took a stand on the negotiations or ran columns on the
issues. The first such editorial in the June 3 New York Times said the
Beijing conference "established concrete targets" and "set timetables for
measuring progress," but concluded that "most of what governments call
action is still just lofty talk" because of cultural resistance, financial
constraints, and a refusal to give priority to women's issues. The
editorial pointed to a 1998 WEDO survey that found "most of the
governments represented at Beijing had drawn up plans to keep their
promises, and 64 countries had changed laws." It credited "growth of local
women's groups" with bringing about these changes.

On June 6, The Christian Science Monitor ran an editorial on the clashes
between religious factions at the conference: "Clearly, many practices
that restrict women, often tied to religious traditions, will have to give
way before the inexorable rightness of affording half the human race a
wider path toward self-realization. But it would be wrong to assume that a
fuller recognition of women's rights is necessarily at odds with religion.
Enlightened religious thinking, in fact, undergirds the push for greater
rights," the editorial said.

A June 7St. Louis Post-Dispatch editorial supported the Beijing Platform's
goals: "The Chinese have a saying: 'Women hold up half the sky.' A
reaffirmation of the Beijing agenda will ensure that women get the help
they deserve to do their part well." A June 8 Newsday editorial quoted
Monique Widyono of Equality Now, who asked, "why in the year 2000 are we
still negotiating over the need to eliminate discriminatory laws?"

The Patriot Ledger (Quincy, MA) June 8 editorial answered its own
question, "So what difference can thousands of people coming together to
support a women's agenda make?" with "Plenty." It said, "Some astonishing
change has occurred in the undeveloped world, where women's lives are the
most wretched." It quoted a leader from Zimbabwe who said, '"Beijing was a
catalyst for a whole lot of things. Look at somewhere like Namibia, which
now has 44 percent women in the local government system.'"

A Cox News Service editorial ran in the Atlanta Journal-Constitution on
June 8 with this message: "Giving educational opportunity to girls and
women has proven to be the key to lifting living standards and
strengthening families. And that includes sex education for young girls."
The editorial noted that the Vatican and "some conservative Muslim
nations" tried to remove the "crucial landmark declaration that women have
sexual rights independent of men." The Baltimore Sun June 10 editorial
also focused on education as the best way to eliminate obstacles for women
and girls.

The Boston Globe ran two commentaries. The first was an op-ed by Judy
Collins on June 9, in which the famous singer noted "women are not only on
the agenda, we have changed the agenda... we have connected to one another
across lines of culture, race, income and language." The op-ed commented
on the victories of recognizing violence against women as a violation of
human rights and the success of micro-credit loan programs, but warned
"our very real gains have produced a strong backlash by patriarchal and
fundamentalist forces worldwide."

In the June 15 Boston Globe column "The Scorecard for Women's Rights,"
Globe columnist Ellen Goodman asked, "do we assess this half-decade of
international women's rights as half-full or half-empty?" Quoting
Charlotte Bunch, Goodman said the half-full argument is that "honor
killings, bride burnings, and female genital mutilation are no longer
regarded as 'cultural matters' but human rights abuses..." The half-empty
argument, offering the suffrage struggles of women in Kuwait as an
example, is that "the world has barely begun to implement the commitments
made in Beijing." Goodman's piece also ran in papers such as the Dayton
Daily News, The Baltimore Sun, and the Orlando Sentinel.

Knight-Ridder news service on June 10 ran a piece by Anika Rahman of the
Center for Reproductive Law and Policy stressing the importance of women's
reproductive rights: "More than one-third of women of reproductive age in
low and middle-income countries do not have access to modern, safe and
acceptable family planning methods... pregnancy-related causes kill
585,000 women annually, and unsafe abortions result in nearly 80,000
deaths each year."

In her June 12 Scripps Howard News Service piece, "Much Carping, Few
Solutions," Bonnie Erbe, host of the PBS program "To the Contrary," wrote,
"Instead of just battling the progress liberal groups are proposing, why
aren't Libya, Sudan, the Vatican, et al., coming up with counterproposals
on how to lift women out of poverty and end the practice of forced
marriage? [A]t least the progressive delegates offered solutions." She
points to the struggle between the Vatican and Catholics for a Free Choice
as one where dialogue rather than "carping" would be useful.

The News & Record (Greensboro, NC) ran a negative editorial on June 15
titled, "Feminists Forced Extremist Agenda at U.N. Conference." It
indicated that positive AP coverage of Women 2000 was misleading, and
claimed Western women's efforts "were aimed at diminishing family/parental
control and morality in favor of a government-knows-best policy." It
concluded, "Countries supporting families and the traditional values of
their cultures couldn't reverse the extremism voted in at the original
Beijing conference in 1995. Thankfully, this time their convictions did
prevent more anti-family, anti-life and truly anti-woman agendas from
being forced upon unwilling nations and unsuspecting citizens."

The Minneapolis Star-Tribune June 13 editorial, "Beijing + 5: Some
Progress for Women, More Needed" took a different position: "Delegates
smartly defeated attempts to reverse some gains outlined in the Beijing
agreement. They preserved the goal that says women should make choices
about their own sexuality -- despite formidable challenges from social and
religious conservatives..." This is available at
http://www.startribune.com/stOnLine/cgi-bin/article?thisSlug=ED13A&date=13
-Jun-2000.

Similarly, a San Francisco Chronicle editorial, "Updating Women's Rights"
(June 15) found that in spite of a "strong backlash," the conference was a
success for proponents of women's rights: "Conservative opponents from
orthodox religious groups and nations tried but failed to roll back a
woman's right to make decisions about her own body..." The editorial is
available at
http://www.sfgate.com/cgi-bin/article.cgi?file=/chronicle/archive/2000/06/15/ED99689.DTL.

The Record (NJ) ran a column on June 18 by Angela King, who wrote, "After
four world conferences on women, and buttressed by the Convention on the
Elimination of All Forms of Discrimination Against Women... the legal
framework supporting women's rights is now in place."



The above analysis was written by Jenesse Miller and Kathy Bonk at the
Communications Consortium Media Center, 1200 New York Avenue, NW, Suite
300, Washington, DC 20005, 202/326-8700.

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