Day will come for woman to lead UN: UNDP boss Helen Clark
Every country, every major organisation like the UN should expect in the fullness of time to have a woman leader.
United Nations (United States): Women are breaking glass ceilings worldwide and the next one to be shattered may well be at the United Nations, the world body's top-ranking woman Helen Clark said.
In an interview, she talked of her plans to enter the race for next UN secretary-general. She is yet to decide whether she will contest for elections and succeed Ban Ki-moon, who steps down in 10 months.
"Every country, every major organisation like the UN should expect in the fullness of time to have a woman leader," Clark said. "But it's still too rare a thing around the world. So for sure, the UN's day will come."
The former prime minister of New Zealand, who heads the UN's largest agency, the UN Development Programme (UNDP), also warned that climate change could wipe out gains in fighting poverty over the coming decades. The challenge for UN development experts is to help countries "build resilience" so they can confront turbulent eco-systems and extreme weather, she said.
Clark will lead a ministerial-level meeting on Thursday to take stock of the UN's development agenda at a time when raging crises in Syria, Yemen and South Sudan are making a dent in global aid funding. Development aid from the world's big donors totalled $135.2 billion in 2014, but some of those funds have since been diverted in Europe to refugee resettlement or fallen victim to austerity cuts.
UN humanitarian appeals have hit record levels in recent years as agencies struggle to address the world's worst refugee crisis since World War II and growing humanitarian needs. "The countries that are not in severe conflict do worry about how much is left for development, after all, the major needs of the conflict crises are met," said Clark, 65, who served as prime minister from 1999 to 2008.
The meeting attended by some 80 ministers will seek to build on a summit in September during which the United Nations agreed on a new set of global goals to end poverty by 2030. At the helm of UNDP for nearly seven years, Clark has been tipped as a possible candidate to succeed Ban and become the first woman in the top UN job, after eight men.
But Clark said she hadn't "offered an opinion" on whether to present her candidacy and sidestepped questions about her being naturally considered for the job as the UN's number three. "I think there would be a difference," she said of a woman in the top job.