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Supporters of Bangladesh’s Awami League march in the street as part of a general election campaign procession in Dhaka in December 2018. Photo: AFP

Great strides have been taken to empower women and girls in the Asia-Pacific region since the Fourth World Conference on Women in Beijing adopted an ambitious global agenda to achieve gender equality 25 years ago. Gender parity has been achieved in primary education. Maternal mortality has been halved.

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Today, the region’s governments are committed to overcoming the persistent challenges of discrimination, gender-based violence and women’s unequal access to resources and decision-making. 

The Asia-Pacific Ministerial Conference for the Beijing+25 Review is meeting in Bangkok from November 27-29 to explore how more Beijing Declaration commitments can be met to improve the lives of women and girls in the region. Asia-Pacific governments have reviewed their progress and identified three priority areas where action is imperative to accelerate progress in the coming five years.

First, we must end violence against women, a severe human rights violation which continues to hinder women’s empowerment. As many as one in two women in the region have experienced physical or sexual violence from an intimate partner in the past 12 months.

Countries in the region have adopted laws and policies to prevent and respond to violence against women. We must build on this progress.

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Female protesters in South Korea rally against “spy-cam porn”, in Seoul in August 2018. Photo: AFP
Female protesters in South Korea rally against “spy-cam porn”, in Seoul in August 2018. Photo: AFP
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