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The Power of the Adolescent Girl: Vision for 2030

Statement of UNFPA Executive Director,


Dr. Babatunde Osotimehin, on
The International Day of the Girl Child, 11 October
Today, as we celebrate the International Day of the Girl Child, the world has
an unprecedented opportunity to focus on the power of girls to drive
progress and transform our world.
By prominently featuring girls rights in the 2030 Agenda for Sustainable
Development last month, the international community has responded
enthusiastically to the evidence that investing in girls yields huge returns.
The new agenda acknowledges that increased attention to the health and
well-being of the worlds adolescent girls, including their sexual and
reproductive health, is a necessary condition for success, and calls
powerfully for a stronger focus on adolescent girls across sectors.
Despite advances in recent years, girls continue to suffer severe
disadvantages, discrimination and exclusion, merely for being young and
being female. For many girls, puberty marks an accelerating trajectory into
inequality. It also represents a critical window for preventive and protective
investments that we must make if we are serious about achieving full
gender equality.
Ensuring that girls are able to exercise their rights, can pursue their
education and have the skills and opportunity to join the workforce is
essential for their own well-being, and a critical foundation for the
health and prosperity of families, communities and nations. These rights
include choosing when and whom to marry, when or whether to have
children, and being free of violence, abuse and exploitation.
When girls are free to define their lives and enjoy their rights, they not only
enjoy better health and healthier children; they are also better able to
contribute to national development as economic actors and entrepreneurs,

helping their countries reap a demographic dividend and driving economic


growth.
Going forward, we need to increase our efforts to end child marriage,
female genital mutilation and other harmful practices affecting girls. We
need to give girls unfettered access to comprehensive sexuality education,
remove laws that impede their access to information, services and choices,
provide them with comprehensive health services, including contraceptive
services, and most critically, keep them in school whether they live in
rural or urban areas, whether they are pregnant or not, whether they are
married or single.
For UNFPA, the success of the 2030 Agenda, which calls on us to leave no
one behind, will be measured by how well we are collectively able to build:
A world in which girls have no limits on their aspirations for the future,
no matter where they are born.
A world where adolescent girls have access to sexual and
reproductive health information and services and possess the
knowledge and confidence they need to make the right choices for a
healthy life.
A world where every girl can enter freely into a productive adulthood
because she is educated, healthy, free from sexually transmitted
infections, such as HIV, and not exposed to violence, unintended
pregnancy or unsafe abortion.
A world where girls are treated with dignity and respect in equal
measure with boys and where, regardless of their sex, young
peoples human rights are promoted and respected.
UNFPA will continue to work with governments, the United Nations system
and civil society to make this vision a reality.
We commit to the bold pledge of the 2030 Agenda to leave no one behind
and to prioritize investment in girls as the smart choice for the health and
prosperity of all our nations.
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