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Gaps in Gender Equality in Cuba
Patricia Grogg interviews UN representative
SUSAN MCDADE
HAVANA (IPS) - United Nations resident
coordinator in Cuba Susan McDade is the
first woman to hold that post, and considers
herself fortunate to have been assigned the
position in a country where women’s rights
are enshrined in the constitution, even if
it does have a "machista" reputation.
Since February 2006, she has been one of the
nine women who today hold the highest-level
U.N. and United Nations Development
Programme (UNDP) posts in Latin America and
the Caribbean, where these positions were
invariably occupied by men until recently.
"As an international organisation, the U.N.
has been promoting greater gender balance at
all levels, but actually there are fewer
women in high-up posts. Latin America was
one of the regions with the biggest
imbalances in that sense, although the
situation has started to change," McDade,
who is from Canada, said in this interview
with IPS.
She added that UNDP regional director Rebeca
Grynspan, a former vice president of Costa
Rica, has played a decisive role in bringing
about that change, by giving a strong boost
to the promotion of women up to the level of
resident coordinators in the countries of
Latin America.
IPS: How have things gone for you in these
three years working in a country with a "machista"
reputation?
SUSAN MCDADE: Personally, I think I was very
fortunate to be posted to a country where
the rights of women are guaranteed in the
constitution, but that does not mean that
there haven’t been times when I was
sidelined because I’m a woman.
IPS: Could you give me an example?
SM: In negotiating or making tough decisions
- when a man does it, he’s seen as a strong
negotiator, but when a woman does it she is
seen as difficult or as a witch.
It’s hard to get people to understand that
decision-making has nothing to do with
gender, that it has to do with the position
itself. The expectation here is that women
are sweeter, more patient and gentle. But
that’s a cultural problem, which doesn’t
have anything to do with the post you hold.
But I would say that the challenge in Cuba
is not being a woman, but being younger than
the people who answer to you. That also
happened to me in China, where I held a
senior position.
Besides, I have young children, and it has
been hard for me to achieve the right
balance between family commitments and my
work life. But that happens in any country.
IPS: What challenges and obstacles does the
third Millennium Development Goal (MDG),
referring to gender equality and the
empowerment of women, face in Cuba?
SM: Women’s participation in the formal
sector is very high. There are even
university departments where women students
far outnumber men. But, like in other
countries, that is not the case in
management positions or high-level posts,
where women are underrepresented.
In the area of politics, the proportion of
women in the National Assembly (parliament)
is among the highest in the world.
However, there is no balance or equality in
unremunerated activities. Women form part of
the labour force and they also have to take
responsibility for the house and the kids.
Men don’t participate in these tasks to an
equal extent.
IPS: So what is the challenge?
SM: One of the challenges for Cuban women is
the lack of adequate availability of
services that enable them to completely
insert themselves into the workplace. And a
growing phenomenon in this country is that
women not only have to raise the kids, but
they have to care for the elderly at home.
There are not enough child care centres, and
there are not enough nursing homes offering
a healthy, appropriate alternative for older
adults, and that is a big challenge faced by
women.
IPS: Does the U.N. system have any project
related to gender violence?
SM: That’s an area we are working on with
the authorities, but we haven’t sought great
visibility for it. The important thing is to
know that Cuba is neither more nor less
vulnerable on that issue than the rest of
the countries of Latin America. It’s a
phenomenon that exists in the Caribbean and
Central America, and which is very difficult
to tackle, regardless of where you are.
IPS: Why is it a difficult problem; what are
the biggest difficulties in tackling it?
SM: One of the biggest difficulties is
understanding the magnitude and nature of
the phenomenon. In second place, the
specific ways to approach and deal with it.
And in third place, how to finance the
services needed by battered women, children
or men and how to raise public awareness on
risks and rights with respect to this issue.
In the case of Cuba, there is no domestic
abuse hot-line, or shelters for people who
are beaten.
IPS: Have the serious damages caused by the
(three major) hurricanes that hit Cuba last
year had an impact on progress towards the
MDGs?
SM: One of the MDGs is ensuring
environmental sustainability, and Cuba is
still working on that. The hurricanes caused
damages in forests and in the management of
river basins.
With regard to the first MDG (eradicating
extreme poverty and hunger), we have no
evidence that hunger has increased, although
the agricultural system had difficulties
that it is still facing to some extent.
The distribution of land for farmers to
work, the opening of stores selling tools
and other farm supplies, and the discussion
of the possibility of making credit
available to farmers open up important
possibilities for bolstering food security.
It is still early to know what the results
will be, but I believe these are areas where
the impact of the hurricanes made it
necessary to face up to challenges that
already existed.
IPS: Did the disasters push many families
into poverty?
SM: The problem here is how to measure
poverty. If you take an indicator based
solely on income, well, farmers who lost
their crops definitely saw their incomes
shrink.
But the U.N. and the UNDP in particular have
argued for years that poverty cannot only be
measured on the basis of incomes, because it
is much more complex than that, and has to
do with opportunities for access to
education and public health services, among
other things.
There is no evidence that the hurricanes
have structurally reduced access to the
health and education systems. Nor that
children under five have been affected in
terms of weight or that life expectancy has
gone down.
The hurricanes had a tremendous impact, but
structurally they did not modify living
standards in Cuba in terms of long-term
measurements.
IPS: How would you evaluate the impact of
this kind of disaster on women?
SM: At a regional level, we know that
normally female-headed households with minor
children are more vulnerable to the impact
of these disasters. It also takes them much
longer to rebuild their homes, because there
is no adult male member of the family who
could contribute his labour power.
In the shelters to which women and children
are evacuated, cases of violence against
them are frequent. Unfortunately, there are
times when they are more vulnerable to being
victimised.
IPS: And in the specific case of Cuba?
SM: A good, in fact excellent, aspect that I
want to stress in the case of Cuba is that
unlike in other countries, thanks to the
system of disaster prevention and
preparedness, there were no cases of women
giving birth in precarious conditions,
because pregnant women are evacuated early
to health centres.
There were discomforts and human suffering,
but we have no evidence that women are more
vulnerable than men in terms of risks to
their lives.
What we do know is that women can be more
vulnerable to sexually transmitted diseases
in the post-hurricane phase, because they
are out of their element, and access to
condoms is more difficult, and conditions of
hygiene are more precarious.
In the evacuation shelters, there are
sometimes shortages of things that
menstruating or nursing women need. These
are pending challenges here and everywhere,
and we are working with the authorities to
ensure better conditions in that area.
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