Close X
Wednesday, October 2, 2024
ADVT 
International

Melinda Gates Wants Liberal Men To Follow McKenna's Work-life Example

Darpan News Desk, 23 Feb, 2016 10:25 AM
    OTTAWA — Philanthropist Melinda Gates says she wants to see male Liberal cabinet ministers follow Environment Minister Catherine McKenna's example by booking a few hours of early evening time exclusively for their families.
     
    Gates, who believes that helping women and girls succeed will alleviate global poverty, says it would set an even stronger example if a man followed McKenna by turning off the phone between 5:30 p.m. and 8 p.m. to focus exclusively on family.
     
    "I'm thrilled she's saying that and doing that because it takes courage, but you know what, it's going to take men also doing and saying the same thing," Gates told The Canadian Press on Monday.
     
    "I think it would send out an equally strong message."
     
    Gates released her annual letter on international development late Monday as part of her ongoing work with the philanthropic foundation she started with her husband Bill, the co-founder of Microsoft.
     
    As it has in the past, the Gates' letter emphasizes the need to reduce carbon emissions and find ways to help the world's poorest.
     
    On the latter issue, she said she had a long discussion with Prime Minister Justin Trudeau at last month's World Economic Forum in Davos and is genuinely impressed with where he wants to take Canada on the world stage.
     
    She commended Trudeau's decision to carry on with Stephen Harper's maternal and newborn child health initiative, including its one new wrinkle — removing the former Conservative prime minister's ban on funding family planning projects that use contraception.
     
    "He and I had a long conversation about the importance of contraceptives and how they can benefit women, so I was very encouraged," Gates said of her recent discussion with Trudeau.
     
     
    Gates was a very public supporter of Harper's initiative to reduce the deaths of pregnant mothers, their newborns and young children in the developing world.
     
    "You always look for common ground, no matter who you're working with," she explained.
     
    "So what I will say about prime minister Harper is: he put MNCH on the agenda not just for Canada, but for the world. He led that initiative, which meant that many, many other countries came in."
     
    Gates said it is a win for everybody, especially 200 million women in poor countries who want access to birth control, that Trudeau has added family planning to Harper's program.
     
    "That's great politics on both sides of the aisle."
     
    But Gates would still like to see Trudeau do more to boost Canada's sagging foreign aid, which has dipped significantly in the last decade.
     
    Just as UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon urged earlier this month, Gates wants Trudeau to come up with a plan for Canada to reach the international development target of donating 0.7 per cent of Gross National Income. It has fallen to about 0.24 per cent.
     
    Trudeau has not committed to the benchmark, which his father, former prime minister Pierre Elliott Trudeau, first set for Canada decades ago and which the country has never reached.
     
    "I would like to see them moving in that direction," said Gates, who had a very specific suggestion for Trudeau.
     
    She urged Canada to make a significant financial contribution to the Global Fund to Fight Aids, Tuberculosis and Malaria, an organization in which the Gates foundation has heavily invested over the last decade and a half.
     
    The fund is launching a new replenishment drive this year and any contribution Canada makes would count as overseas development spending, she noted.
     
    "I'm really hoping that Canada will use their voice and their leadership and their Canadian dollars."

    MORE International ARTICLES

    Nepal snow storm death toll reaches 38 as rescuers spot 9 more bodies

    Nepal snow storm death toll reaches 38 as rescuers spot 9 more bodies
    KATMANDU, Nepal - A rescue helicopter spotted nine more bodies Saturday on a trekking trail in northern Nepal, bringing the death toll to 38 from this week's series of snow storms and avalanches in the worst hiking disaster in the Himalayan nation.

    Nepal snow storm death toll reaches 38 as rescuers spot 9 more bodies

    Chennai-born Indian-American scientist to get rare honour

    Chennai-born Indian-American scientist to get rare honour
    Chennai born Indian-American engineer and scientist Subra Suresh is set to be inducted into the Institute of Medicine (IOM) on Sunday...

    Chennai-born Indian-American scientist to get rare honour

    Four men charged with terror plots against police in London

    Four men charged with terror plots against police in London
    Four men have been charged with intending to commit terrorist attacks on British police and army barracks in London, the Metropolitan Police said Friday...

    Four men charged with terror plots against police in London

    Pakistan's stance to solve problems with India dented: Editorial

    Pakistan's stance to solve problems with India dented: Editorial
    The recent spurt in violence along the India-Pakistan border has put the two nations back on collision course, an editorial in a leading daily said Saturday...

    Pakistan's stance to solve problems with India dented: Editorial

    US hospital worker handled Ebola samples isolated on ship

    US hospital worker handled Ebola samples isolated on ship
    A health worker at a Texas hospital, who may have had contact with specimens from the first patient diagnosed with Ebola on the US soil, has been...

    US hospital worker handled Ebola samples isolated on ship

    China targeting Indian wedding market

    China targeting Indian wedding market
    With destination weddings catching on amongst rich Indian families, China is targeting the lucrative segment in a big way, a Chinese official said here Saturday....

    China targeting Indian wedding market