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News Express(English Edition)

UN sounds alarm over backslide in gender equality

Women and girls are navigating a very challenging moment of profound strain, democratic backsliding, rising conflicts and economic pressures, a senior UN official said Wednesday.



There's also the shrinking of civic space as well as increasingly organized pushback on gender equality and the regression of women's rights, said Sarah Hendriks, UN Women's director of the Policy, Programme and Intergovernmental Support Division, on the global launch of the UN secretary-general's report, "Ensuring and Strengthening Access to Justice for All Women and Girls," ahead of International Women's Day 2026 and the 70th Session of the Commission on the Status of Women, which is scheduled for March 9-19.



Hendriks warned that there are women who choose not to report the violence they experience, because they fear that they won't be believed; there are women who are paid less than their male counterparts in the very same work in places where the law does not actually require equal pay; and there are girls who don't have birth registration, face heightened risk of child marriage, and face heightened risk of trafficking.



"No country in the world has achieved full legal equality between women and men," she said.