U.N. creates new body on women, gender equality

UNITED NATIONS, (Reuters) – After years of difficult  negotiations, the U.N. General Assembly voted yesterday to set  up a body that will seek to improve the situation of women and  girls around the world.

The new body will be known officially as the U.N. Entity  for Gender Equality and the Empowerment of Women, although  officials say it will be referred to as U.N. Women  (www.unwomen.org). It will consolidate four separate U.N.  divisions now dealing with women’s and gender issues.

“U.N. Women will significantly boost U.N. efforts to  promote gender equality, expand opportunity, and tackle  discrimination around the globe,” U.N. Secretary-General Ban  Ki-moon said in a statement.

U.N. diplomats said four years of negotiations between  Western developed nations and developing countries, many of  them states where women are often discriminated against, had  been tough because of varying views on women’s rights and  gender equality.

A new post of under-secretary-general will created to head  U.N. Women, with diplomats saying privately that former Chilean  President Michelle Bachelet is one of the top candidates.

Ban said he was inviting suggestions for candidates from  member states and non-governmental organizations.

U.N. Women will focus on supporting inter-government bodies  like the Commission on the Status of Women and ensuring that  all United Nations agencies and organizations live up to their  commitments to gender equality, the U.N. said in a statement.

U.N. Women will become operational on Jan. 1, 2011.