Interview with Anna Záborská - Women's Rights Committee Chair

Published: 8 April 2009 y., Wednesday

Motor šou Budapešte (Vengrija)
The impact of poverty on women and the work-life balance are just two issues the Women's Rights Committee had tackled over the last Parliamentary term. As we head towards the end of this legislature we talk to the Chair of the Committee, Slovak EPP-ED Anna Záborská, about the Committee's record and what key issues lie ahead.

Which issues discussed by the Women's Rights Committee over the last term have been the most important?
 
Personally, I find them all important and we have adopted more than 40 reports. But those that I would like to highlight are those on the Lisbon strategy, demographics in Europe, family-work balance, women and poverty, migrant women, women in jail and the influence of this situation on family life. There were also reports on women in conflicts areas and of course we dealt with the issue of women in important posts and women in science.
 
A lot of reports concerning gender equality are non-legislative. Do they have any impact on people's lives?
 
I think that reports of the Women's Rights Committee are very important as they provide a kind of background research of the issue in EU. They propose some solutions and these reports can be used in the work of other committees. So they do not enter directly into EU legislation, but they serve as a source of information.

Only 3 out of 40 members of Committee are men. Why is that so and what would you do to change it?
 
The reason why women have not yet achieved equality, despite the fact that they have been trying for decades, is the idea that they can do it by themselves, that they do not need men. Since the beginning of this Parliamentary term we started talking more and more that it is essential to include men on the issue. The equality of women must also be in the interests of men. For example take work-family balance: if we do not include men, women will never achieve their goal. When men realize that women expect and assume that men would participate, men will also be more interested to become the members of Women's Rights Committee.
 
What are the topics you and your fellow MEPs on the Committee will be working on in the future?
 
The above mentioned topics are long-term issues. But when I see the current economic and financial crisis, which is very likely to turn into social crisis, the topics that will be discussed in future are women and poverty, work-family balance and intergeneration solidarity. We have also to bear in mind that at the current demographic situation, one of the solutions, which I do not consider as being paramount, is immigration. So the topic which will be discussed a lot in next parliamentary term will be also female immigrants and family reunification.
 

Šaltinis: europarl.europa.eu
Copying, publishing, announcing any information from the News.lt portal without written permission of News.lt editorial office is prohibited.

Facebook Comments

New comment


Captcha

Associated articles

The most popular articles

Limiting animal testing without hindering scientific research

The use of animals in scientific experiments could soon be reduced by new legislation, approved by the Agriculture Committee on Monday, which strives to strike the right balance between improving animal welfare and assisting research against diseases. more »

EU travel rights - peace of mind for passengers

EU holidaymakers travelling by plane or train are protected by a whole range of consumer rights. more »

Commission welcomes European Parliament approval for maritime passenger rights

The European Commission welcomes the European Parliament voting in favour of a regulation on rights of passengers travelling by sea and by inland waterways. more »

Dealing with Europe's growing mountain of electrical waste

Mobile phones, computers, TVs - we like them but where do they go when we are finished with them? In the worst case they can be dismantled by hand for scrap by children in developing countries. more »

Incumbent and former heads of state, politicians and diplomats offer condolences to the people og Lithuania on the passing of President A. M. Brazauskas

Following the death of President Algirdas Mykolas Brazauskas, on 28 June Lithuanian Embassies abroad opened the door for people, who want to sign the Condolence Book. more »

Transport: Commission launches campaign to inform passengers about their rights

Passengers will enjoy easier access to information about their rights when travelling by rail or air thanks to a Europe-wide publicity campaign in 23 languages launched by the European Commission today. more »

Condolences of Mrs Irena Degutienė, Speaker of the Seimas, upon Death of Former President H.E. Mr Algirdas Mykolas Brazauskas

Lithuania has been grieved by the heartbreaking news about the decease of Algirdas Mykolas Brazauskas, former President, Prime Minister, Signatory to the Act of Independence, and the first Head of State of Lithuania after the Restoration of Independence. more »

After the passing of President Algirdas Mykolas Brazauskas following a serious and prolonged illness, President Dalia Grybauskaitė expressed deep condolences to his family

We have lost a warm person and a prominent politician who had been at the wheel of state at challenging and difficult stages in the history of Lithuania. more »

The social crisis warrants as much political commitment as the banking crisis

Europe's financial and economic crisis is increasingly becoming a social crisis too, and is testing European solidarity to the limit. more »

West Aceh bans tight women's wear

In a move to enforce a style of dress they believe is in accordance with sharia law, the authorities in the Muslim Indonesian province of West Aceh are handing out long skirts to women wearing tight pants. more »