United States Institute of Peace Announces Finalists for 2021 Women Building Peace Award on the International Day of Peace

WASHINGTON, Sept. 21, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — The United States Institute of Peace (USIP) is proud to announce the finalists for the 2021 Women Building Peace Award on the International Day of Peace.

This prestigious global award is given each year to a woman peacebuilder who has made a major contribution to peace in her country.

This year, USIP received nominations from over 30 countries.

After careful review and consideration, a council of distinguished experts and leaders has selected the following finalists: Tabassum Adnan from Pakistan, Josephine Ekiru from Kenya, Teresita Gaviria from Colombia, Waldistrudis Hurtado from Colombia, Tatiana Mukanire from the Democratic Republic of the Congo, Esther Omam from Cameroon, Nyachangkouth Tai from South Sudan, Jayne W. Waithitu from Kenya, and Rani Yan Yan from Bangladesh.

The recipient of this year’s award will be announced at a ceremony on October 20, 2021, at USIP’s iconic campus on the National Mall in Washington D.C.

“Throughout the world, women play leading roles in preventing conflict, reducing violence and ending wars,” said Lise Grande, USIP’s president and CEO. “This is our chance to celebrate and elevate women who make the difference.”

“These women face enormous odds on a daily basis, often risking their lives for peace,” said Megan Beyer, co-chair of the selection council. “We stand in profound awe of their courage.”

“Each of the women we have selected as finalists embodies the bravery, leadership and commitment to community and country that this award recognizes,” said Marcia Carlucci, co-chair of the council.

“Reading the stories of these women is humbling, inspiring and energizing,” said Nancy Lindborg, honorary chair. “Their efforts will inspire generations of women peacebuilders.”

Congress founded USIP in 1984 as an independent, nonpartisan, national institute to prevent and end violent conflict abroad and uphold the United States’ fundamental commitment to peace.

For information on the award, visit: www.usip.org/womenbuildingpeace

For information on USIP, visit: https://www.usip.org/about

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Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation Honors Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, Former Executive Director of UN Women, With 2021 Global Goalkeeper Award

Foundation also recognizes three additional Goalkeepers Global Goals award winners who are taking action to help achieve the UN Sustainable Development Goals

SEATTLE, Sept. 21, 2021 /PRNewswire/ — The Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation today announced Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, former United Nations under-secretary-general and executive director of UN Women, as the winner of the 2021 Global Goalkeeper Award. As part of its annual Goalkeepers campaign, the foundation also announced the winners of three additional Goalkeepers Global Goals Awards.

“By shining a light on the pandemic’s disproportionate impact on women and girls, former Under-Secretary-General Mlambo-Ngcuka has ensured that global and local efforts to battle COVID-19 must take into account the acute disparities they face,” said Melinda French Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. “She exemplifies the leadership we need in the fight for gender equality around the world.”

The 2021 Global Goalkeeper Award recognizes a leader who has driven progress on a global scale toward achieving the Sustainable Development Goals (SDGs). This year’s award is being presented to Mlambo-Ngcuka for her unwavering global leadership on gender equality and continued advocacy to address the pandemic’s disproportionate impact on women and girls. Mlambo-Ngcuka, a former deputy president of South Africa, has dedicated her life to advancing social justice and working with civil society organizations. During her tenure as executive director of UN Women, she led work to strengthen and expand partnerships with government, male allies, and the media, all in service of advancing SDG 5, which aims to achieve gender equality and empower all women and girls. Mlambo-Ngcuka played a vital role in helping to spearhead and deliver the Generation Equality Forum in July 2021, which helped mobilize more than $40 billion in commitments from member states, the private sector, philanthropies, and civil society to drive transformative change for women and girls around the world.

This year’s three additional Goalkeepers Global Goals awards were given to Fairooz Faizah Beether of Bangladesh, Jenifer Colpas of Colombia, and Satta Sheriff of Liberia. Each awardee was recognized for their work supporting the Global Goals in their local communities.

The 2021 Changemaker Award, which celebrates an individual who has inspired change using personal experience or from a position of leadership, recognizes Fairooz Faizah Beether of Bangladesh for her work promoting good health and well-being (SDG 3). Beether is the co-founder of the Moner School, an online platform that aims to raise awareness around mental health and ensure equal access to mental health care across the country.

The 2021 Progress Award, which celebrates an individual who supports progress via a science, technology, digital, or business initiative, recognizes Jenifer Colpas of Colombia for her work to improve access to clean water and sanitation (SDG 6). Colpas is the co-founder and executive director of Tierra Grata, a social enterprise that develops low-cost, easy-to-install solutions providing access to clean energy, safe water, and sanitation services to rural communities in Colombia.

The 2021 Campaign Award, which celebrates a campaign that has raised awareness or built a community by inspiring action and creating change, recognizes Satta Sheriff of Liberia for her work to promote gender equality (SDG 5). Sheriff is the founder and executive director of Action for Justice and Human Rights (AJHR), a youth-led NGO founded to advocate and ensure access to justice and respect for human rights in Liberia, focusing particularly on helping women and girls.

“Disparities everywhere continue to worsen due to the impacts of COVID-19,” said Bill Gates, co-chair of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. “This year, we are especially honored to recognize four leaders whose work demonstrates that progress is possible, even in the most difficult of times.”

“These award winners show how women are leading the way in coming up with the innovative solutions needed to rebuild our communities and nations,” said Mark Suzman, CEO of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation. “This year’s winners continue to inspire us as they work tirelessly to create a more equal, resilient, and compassionate world.”

The announcement of the Goalkeepers Global Goals Awards winners follows last week’s release of the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation’s fifth annual Goalkeepers Report. This year’s report, co-authored by Bill Gates and Melinda French Gates, shows that disparities caused by COVID-19 remain stark, and those who have been hardest hit by the pandemic will be the slowest to recover. Fortunately, amidst the challenges of the past year, the world stepped up to avert some of the worst-case scenarios. In the report, the co-chairs highlight the “breathtaking innovation” that was only possible because of global collaboration, commitment, and investments over decades. They acknowledge that averting the worst-case scenarios is commendable, yet they note it’s not enough. To ensure a truly equitable recovery from the pandemic, they call for long-term investments in health and economies—like the ones that led to the rapid development of the COVID-19 vaccine—to propel recovery efforts and get the world back on track to meet the Global Goals.

Biographies, images, and a film of the Goalkeepers Global Goals award winners can be downloaded at: www.gatesfoundation.org/goalkeepers/about-event/awards

About the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation
Guided by the belief that every life has equal value, the Bill & Melinda Gates Foundation works to help all people lead healthy, productive lives. In developing countries, it focuses on improving people’s health and giving them the chance to lift themselves out of hunger and extreme poverty. In the United States, it seeks to ensure that all people—especially those with the fewest resources—have access to the opportunities they need to succeed in school and life. Based in Seattle, Washington, the foundation is led by CEO Mark Suzman, under the direction of Bill Gates and Melinda French Gates.

About Goalkeepers
Goalkeepers is the foundation’s campaign to accelerate progress towards the Sustainable Development Goals (Global Goals). By sharing stories and data behind the Global Goals through an annual report, we hope to inspire a new generation of leaders—Goalkeepers who raise awareness of progress, hold their leaders accountable, and drive action to achieve the Global Goals.

About the Global Goals
On September 25, 2015, at the United Nations headquarters in New York, 193 world leaders committed to the 17 Sustainable Development Goals (Global Goals). These are a series of ambitious objectives and targets to achieve three extraordinary things by 2030: end poverty, fight inequality and injustice, and fix climate change.

Project Everyone, co-creators of Goalkeepers, was founded by writer, director, and SDG Advocate Richard Curtis with the ambition to help achieve the Global Goals through raising awareness, holding leaders accountable, and driving action. Find out more at www.project-everyone.org.

Media Contact: media@gatesfoundation.org

La Fondation Bill & Melinda Gates honore Mme Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, ancienne directrice exécutive d’ONU Femmes, avec le prix mondial 2021 Global Goalkeeper Award

La Fondation décerne également le prix Goalkeepers Global Goals à trois autres lauréates,  qui prennent des mesures pour aider à atteindre les Objectifs de développement durable des Nations Unies

SEATTLE, 21 septembre 2021 /PRNewswire/ — La Fondation Bill & Melinda Gates a annoncé aujourd’hui que Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, ancienne secrétaire générale adjointe des Nations Unies et directrice exécutive d’ONU Femmes, a remporté le prix 2021 Global Goalkeeper Award. Dans le cadre de sa campagne annuelle Goalkeepers, la Fondation a également annoncé les gagnants de trois autres prix Goalkeepers Global Goals Award.

« En mettant en lumière l’impact disproportionné de la pandémie sur les femmes et les filles, l’ancienne Secrétaire générale adjointe Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka a veillé à ce que les efforts mondiaux et locaux pour lutter contre la COVID-19 prennent en compte les disparités aiguës auxquelles elles sont confrontées », a déclaré Melinda French Gates, coprésidente de la Fondation Bill & Melinda Gates. Elle incarne le leadership dont nous avons besoin dans la lutte pour l’égalité des sexes dans le monde. »

Le prix 2021 Global Goalkeeper Award récompense un leader qui a fait progresser les Objectifs de développement durable (ODD) à l’échelle mondiale. Le prix de cette année est remis à Mme Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka pour son leadership mondial indéfectible en matière d’égalité des sexes et son plaidoyer continu visant à contrer l’impact disproportionné de la pandémie sur les femmes et les filles. Mme Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka, ancienne vice-présidente de l’Afrique du Sud, a consacré sa vie à promouvoir la justice sociale et à travailler avec les organisations de la société civile. Au cours de son mandat de directrice exécutive d’ONU Femmes, elle a dirigé des travaux visant à renforcer et à élargir les partenariats avec le gouvernement, les alliés masculins et les médias, afin de faire progresser l’ODD 5, qui vise à atteindre l’égalité des sexes et à permettre à toutes les femmes et filles de bénéficier d’une autonomie. Mme Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka a joué un rôle essentiel dans l’organisation et la direction du Generation Equality Forum en juillet 2021, qui a permis de mobiliser plus de 40 milliards de dollars d’engagements des États membres, du secteur privé, des philanthropes et de la société civile afin de favoriser un changement transformateur pour les femmes et les filles du monde entier.

Cette année, les trois autres prix Goalkeepers Global Goals Award ont été remis à Fairooz Faizah Beether du Bangladesh, Jenifer Colpas de Colombie et Satta Sheriff du Libéria. Chaque lauréate a été reconnue pour son travail en faveur des Objectifs mondiaux dans sa communauté locale.

Le prix 2021 Changemaker Award, qui rend hommage à une personne qui a inspiré le changement grâce à son expérience personnelle ou à un poste de direction, récompense Fairooz Faizah Beether du Bangladesh pour son travail de promotion de la santé et du bien-être (ODD 3). Fairooz Faizah Beether est la cofondatrice de Moner School, une plateforme en ligne qui vise à sensibiliser la population à la santé mentale et à assurer un accès égal aux soins de santé mentale partout au pays.

Le prix 2021 Progress Award, qui rend hommage à une personne qui soutient le progrès au moyen d’une initiative scientifique, technologique, numérique ou commerciale, récompense le travail de Jenifer Colpas de Colombie pour améliorer l’accès à l’eau potable et à l’assainissement (ODD 6). Jenifer Colpas est la cofondatrice et directrice générale de Tierra Grata, une entreprise sociale qui développe des solutions peu coûteuses et faciles à installer offrant un accès à l’énergie propre, à l’eau potable et aux services d’assainissement aux communautés rurales de Colombie.

Le prix 2021 Campaign Award, qui célèbre une campagne qui a permis de sensibiliser la population ou de bâtir une communauté en incitant à la prise de mesures et en générant des changements, rend hommage à Satta Sheriff du Libéria pour son travail en faveur de l’égalité des sexes (ODD 5). Satta Sheriff est la fondatrice et la directrice exécutive d’une ONG dirigée par des jeunes gens : Action for Justice and Human Rights (AJHR). Fondée pour promouvoir et garantir l’accès à la justice et le respect des droits de l’homme au Libéria, cette ONG cible en particulier les femmes et les filles, et tente de leur apporter son soutien.

« Les disparités continuent de s’aggraver partout en raison des répercussions de la COVID-19 », a déclaré Bill Gates, coprésident de la Fondation Bill & Melinda Gates. « Cette année, nous sommes particulièrement fiers de récompenser quatre leaders dont le travail démontre que des progrès sont possibles, même dans les moments les plus difficiles. »

« Les lauréates de ces prix montrent que les femmes sont des leaders dans l’élaboration de solutions novatrices pour rebâtir nos collectivités et nos nations », a déclaré Mark Suzman, PDG de la Fondation Bill & Melinda Gates. Les lauréates de cette année continuent de nous inspirer alors qu’elles travaillent sans relâche pour créer un monde plus équitable, plus résilient et plus compatissant. »

L’annonce des lauréates des Goalkeepers Global Goals Awards fait suite à la publication, la semaine dernière, du cinquième rapport annuel de la Fondation Bill & Melinda Gates sur les gardiens de but : le Goalkeepers Report. Le rapport de cette année, rédigé conjointement par Bill Gates et Melinda French Gates, montre que les disparités causées par la COVID-19 demeurent criantes et que les personnes les plus durement touchées par la pandémie seront les plus lents à se rétablir. Heureusement, confronté aux défis de l’année passée, le monde s’est mobilisé pour éviter certains des scénarios les plus catastrophiques. Dans le rapport, les coprésidents soulignent « l’innovation spectaculaire » qui n’aurait pas été possible sans les efforts de collaboration et d’engagement et les investissements mondiaux réalisés au fil des décennies. Les auteurs du rapport, s’ils reconnaissent qu’il est louable d’avoir évité les pires scénarios, font remarquer que cela n’est pas suffisant. Les coprésidents appellent à des investissements à long terme dans la santé et les économies, comme ceux qui ont mené au développement rapide du vaccin contre la COVID-19, afin de s’assurer que les pays se rétablissent de la pandémie de manière véritablement équitable, de stimuler les efforts de rétablissement et de remettre le monde sur la bonne voie pour atteindre les Objectifs mondiaux.

Les biographies, les images et un film des lauréates du prix Goalkeepers Global Goals Award peuvent être téléchargés à l’adresse suivante : www.gatesfoundation.org/goalkeepers/about-event/awards

À propos de la Fondation Bill & Melinda Gates
Guidée par la conviction que chaque vie a une valeur égale, la Fondation Bill & Melinda Gates s’efforce d’aider tous les individus à mener une vie saine et productive. Dans les pays en développement, elle vise à améliorer la santé des populations et à leur donner la possibilité de se sortir de la faim et de l’extrême pauvreté. Aux États-Unis, elle cherche à faire en sorte que tous les individus, en particulier ceux qui ont le moins de ressources, aient accès aux opportunités dont ils ont besoin pour réussir à l’école et dans la vie. Basée à Seattle, dans l’État de Washington, la Fondation est dirigée par le PDG Mark Suzman, sous la direction de Bill Gates et de Melinda French Gates.

À propos de Goalkeepers
Goalkeepers est la campagne de la Fondation pour accélérer les progrès vers les objectifs de développement durable (Objectifs mondiaux). En partageant les histoires et les données qui sous-tendent les Objectifs mondiaux par le biais d’un rapport annuel, nous espérons inspirer une nouvelle génération de dirigeants – des Goalkeepers qui sensibilisent au progrès, tiennent leurs dirigeants responsables et incitent à l’action pour atteindre les objectifs mondiaux.

À propos des Objectifs mondiaux
Le 25 septembre 2015, au siège des Nations unies à New York, 193 dirigeants du monde entier se sont engagés à atteindre 17 objectifs de développement durable (Objectifs mondiaux). Il s’agit d’une série d’objectifs et de buts ambitieux visant à réaliser trois choses extraordinaires d’ici 2030 : mettre fin à la pauvreté, lutter contre les inégalités et l’injustice, et remédier au changement climatique.

L’agence Project Everyone, co-créatrice de Goalkeepers, a été fondée par le scénariste, réalisateur et défenseur des Objectifs de développement durable, Richard Curtis, avec l’ambition de contribuer à la réalisation des Objectifs mondiaux par la sensibilisation, la responsabilisation des dirigeants et la conduite d’actions. Pour en savoir plus, consultez le site www.project-everyone.org.

Contact pour les média : media@gatesfoundation.org

West and Central Africa: Weekly Regional Humanitarian Snapshot (14-20 September 2021)

As of 18 September, 4,651 cholera cases have been recorded across the country, including 149 deaths. 55 per cent of the cases are women. The cholera epidemic first broke out in the central regions of Tahoua, Maradi, and Zinder, before spreading to the western regions of Dosso, Tillabéri, and Niamey.

Maradi region is among the most affected with 2,623 cases, followed by Tahoua region with 1,058 cases and Zinder region with 515 cases. The case fatality rate is three per cent.

Humanitarian medical partners are responding to the epidemic through the management and treatment of cases, the strengthening of surveillance activities, and the pre-positioning of cholera control supplies

CHAD

250,000 AFFECTED BY FLOODS ACROSS 400 VILLAGES

Ongoing flooding affected about 250,000 people in 400 villages across Tandjilé,

Mandoul, Ennedi-Ouest, N’Djamena, and Batha regions. Fifteen people have lost their lives and 17 are missing. 329 people have been injured. Tandjilé region in the southwest continues to be the worst affected with over 32,000 houses damaged, leaving 160,000 people homeless. Flooding negatively impacted farming and livelihoods. Thousands of livestock have been lost and about 70,000 hectares of crops damaged. Rain has been unevenly distributed in the region since the start of the rainy season in June. There are areas with high accumulations of rainfall, while others have a deficit of precipitation raising fears of food and nutritional insecurity.

The regions of Sila, in the southeast, and Wadi Fira, in the central east, are particularly suffering from lack of rain.

CAMEROON

DISPLACEMENT OF ABOUT 1,390 PEOPLE IN LOGONE-ET-CHARI DIVISION

Following the non-state armed groups (NSAG) attack on the Blamé advanced military post on 14 August and its consequent dismantlement, about 1,390 people fled from Blamé village in Logone-etChari division, in the Far North region, to neighbouring towns. Needs assessments indicated that displaced people need shelter, food, water and sanitation, education, health, and protection assistance.

NIGERIA

FLASH FLOODS AFFECT 100,000; CHOLERA KILLS SEVEN

Flash floods killed seven people and affected over 100,000 in Adamawa State in the northeast, destroying dozens of houses, particularly in Shelleng Local Government Area (LGA). Populations were temporarily displaced and forced to take shelter in nearby locations until floodwaters receded.

The State and National Emergency Management Agencies warned people across riverine communities to temporarily relocate to higher ground in line with flooding alerts, listing several communities in Adamawa amongst high-risk locations.

The recent flooding, which typically contaminates water sources, has raised concerns about a possible spike in cholera cases. Suspected cases continue to increase across LGAs of Adamawa State, where 169 cases and seven fatalities have been reported so far.

Source: UN Office for the Coordination of Humanitarian Affairs

Cameroonians Call for Cease-Fire in Conflict Zones on Peace Day

For this year's U.N. World Peace Day (September 21), thousands of Cameroonians have called for a cease-fire between the military and separatists. People who marched in several cities and towns said they were tired of burying civilians caught up in the fighting. But the conflict is not likely to end soon.

The song, "We want peace," by Cameroonian performer Salatiel blasted through speakers in Yaounde, capital of the central African country, on 2021 World Peace Day.

In the music, Salatiel says Cameroon needs immediate peace without which the entire country will sink into ruins.

Esther Njomo Omam, director of the non-governmental organization Reach Out Cameroon, organized the rally. She says Cameroonians should give peace a chance.

"It is our collective responsibility to be peace mediators wherever we find ourselves in our various communities, and we are calling on our government to receive the message, the call for peace with an open heart. Same as we are saying that please, the non-state armed groups receive our call for peace with an open heart. This is the time for appeasement," Omam said.

Similar peace walks took place in Buea, Bamenda and Kumba, all cities in western regions, where armed separatist groups are active, and the northern towns of Maroua, Garoua and Ngaoundere, all close to Cameroon's border with Nigeria, the site of many incursions by the militant group Boko Haram.

Omam pleaded with jihadist groups, government troops and separatist groups to declare a cease-fire. She said silencing the guns is the only way the lives of civilians, government troops, jihadist and separatist fighters can be spared from either wounds or dying.

The government said a majority of people who took part at the peace walks were women affected by the crises. Some of them said they lost family members in the crises.

Marie-Therese Abena Ondoa, Cameroon’s minister of women’s empowerment and the family, says the military ordered by the government to protect civilians cannot drop weapons.

"I am begging that our children, our young brothers, our sisters who are in the bush exerting or preparing to come and exert violence should give up violence, leave the bush because we have all become beggars of peace. So I am pleading for all of us to do all that is within our reach so that our beloved country can become a land of peace," Ondoa said.

Rose Mary Etakah of the Cameroon Civil Society took part in the peace walk in Yaounde. She said the armed conflicts in Cameroon will not end unless there is a cease-fire.

"Within five years, we have had guns, we have had an increase in weapons entering the country and we do not know who are carrying these weapons. We don't know the number of people that are armed, so I think it is better to stop it now, so that by the time we retrieve the guns, maybe it will be less than if we allow it to go further," Etakah said.

The United Nations General Assembly declared the annual observance of International Day of Peace in 1981. The day is devoted to strengthening the ideals of peace, through observing 24 hours of cease-fire and non-violence.

Source: Voice of America