Close X
Saturday, October 5, 2024
ADVT 
National

Gates sees Canada as partner in putting women at top of world aid agenda

Darpan News Desk The Canadian Press, 22 Jan, 2015 12:16 PM

    OTTAWA — Last year, the billionaire philanthropist Melinda Gates and her daughter spent two days living at a family farm in Tanzania with twin 13-year-old siblings, a brother and sister, and their parents.

    Each night, the girl wouldn't begin her homework until 10:30 p.m. because she had to first finish chopping wood, fetching water, doing the laundry, cooking dinner and washing the dishes. Her brother, meanwhile, was free to study. He'd accomplished something she hadn't — passing high school entry exams.

    To Gates, the co-chair of the foundation started with her husband Bill, the situation spoke volumes about the need the level the playing field between the sexes if poor countries are to throw off the shackles of poverty.

    "Education is a great leveller. But if the factors that hold girls back are not addressed, and if access to education isn't equal, then education will become another cause of inequity, rather than a cure for it," the couple write in their annual letter on development, released Wednesday.

    In an exclusive interview with The Canadian Press, Melinda Gates said she wants to see greater equality between the sexes as the key focus in global development in the next decade and a half — something in which she believes Canada is well-positioned to be a partner.

    She cited Stephen Harper's Muskoka Initiative on maternal, newborn and child health, towards which the prime minister has committed more than $6.3 billion between 2010 and 2020.

    "You have more women in the development community pushing these issues, and you finally have more men saying, 'I'm going to stand up for women,'" Gates said from New York.

    "Prime Minister Harper is a prime example of this; Prime Minister David Cameron in the U.K. saying that he's for gender, is a prime example. We need to have men, because quite honestly it's men often who are making the funding decisions."

    This is an important year for the global development agenda because the 15-year-old United Nations Millennium Development goals expire. When the world meets at the General Assembly in September, the post-2015 agenda will be mapped out.

    Canada is pushing hard to maintain child and maternal health — the focus of two of the eight current goals — as a priority while pushing for the inclusion of ending early forced marriage, another stated objective.

    Gates said she expects the new goals to be broader and with more targets, giving donor countries the ability to pick areas of focus the way Harper did.

    The Gates's letter says the lives of people in poor countries will improve more rapidly in the next 15 than at any other time in history.

    It lays out a variety of areas where progress can be made — from wiping diseases such as polio and malaria off the face of the Earth, to continuing to bring down the number of women and children who die in childbirth or before a toddler's fifth birthday.

    It predicts mobile phones will give an additional two billion poor people access to bank accounts by allowing them to conduct small transactions on their handheld devices.

    The 15-year-old Gates Foundation is one of the largest in the world, and was initially a major investor in Harper's Muskoka Initiative when he unveiled it at the G8 summit Canada hosted in 2010.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Montrealers frustrated with lack of Charlie Hebdo copies

    Montrealers frustrated with lack of Charlie Hebdo copies
    MONTREAL — About 100 people who lined up outside a Montreal store on Friday morning hoping to pick up a copy of Charlie Hebdo were left disappointed when fewer than expected were delivered.

    Montrealers frustrated with lack of Charlie Hebdo copies

    UofO hockey team won't play new season, will work on 'better guidance' for athletes

    UofO hockey team won't play new season, will work on 'better guidance' for athletes
    OTTAWA — The University of Ottawa says its men's varsity hockey team, which was suspended in connection with a sexual assault investigation last year, will not be participating in the 2015-2016 hockey season.

    UofO hockey team won't play new season, will work on 'better guidance' for athletes

    Baird starts four-day Israeli visit on Friday, and will travel to West Bank

    Baird starts four-day Israeli visit on Friday, and will travel to West Bank
    OTTAWA — Foreign Affairs Minister John Baird decided not to visit one of Jerusalem's most contested holy sites, which has been a tinderbox of violence in recent months.

    Baird starts four-day Israeli visit on Friday, and will travel to West Bank

    Fraud fears prompt revenue agency to tighten checks on volunteer tax helpers

    Fraud fears prompt revenue agency to tighten checks on volunteer tax helpers
    OTTAWA — The federal revenue agency is stepping up scrutiny of volunteers who help prepare income-tax returns after a suspected fraudster was spotted at a tax clinic.

    Fraud fears prompt revenue agency to tighten checks on volunteer tax helpers

    Joe Oliver refuses to provide details on deadline for delayed budget

    Joe Oliver refuses to provide details on deadline for delayed budget
    OTTAWA — Finance Minister Joe Oliver is refusing to provide a deadline for the Conservative government's now-delayed federal budget, saying he doesn't want to get into "negative hypotheticals."

    Joe Oliver refuses to provide details on deadline for delayed budget

    One Dead, Three Injured After Being Hit By Vehicles In Metro Vancouver

    One Dead, Three Injured After Being Hit By Vehicles In Metro Vancouver
    Mounties in Langley say a 54-year-old man was hit by a truck at about 9:20 p.m. Thursday and has been pronounced dead in hospital.

    One Dead, Three Injured After Being Hit By Vehicles In Metro Vancouver