Watson and UN chief Ban are shown the way to the exit following a photo opportunity promoting the HeForShe campaign in New York in September last year.

Reuters/London

British actress Emma Watson has urged young men to speak out when women are degraded, husbands to support wives to pursue their ambitions and businessmen who mentor women to share their experiences, as part of a drive to get more men to champion women’s rights.
The star, also a goodwill ambassador for UN Women, was speaking yesterday at the World Economic Forum (WEF) meeting in Davos, Switzerland, where she helped to launch the next phase of a campaign to encourage men and boys to join the struggle for equal rights.
Watson said since the HeforShe campaign began in September, it had received an outpouring of support from high-profile figures such as Hillary Clinton, Prince Harry and Archbishop Desmond Tutu.
IMPACT 10X10X10, the initiative launched yesterday, is a one-year pilot project seeking concrete commitments from governments, companies and universities on women’s empowerment and gender equality.
A girl born this year will be 80 before she lives in a world of gender equality, unless business leaders shatter the glass ceiling, heads of state do more to protect women and young men stand up for equal rights, the head of UN Women Phumzile Mlambo-Ngcuka said.
“Women alone cannot fight the deeply entrenched stereotypes in our society. But together men and women can turn the tide of inequality,” Mlambo-Ngcuka said in Davos. “The fight to end gender-based injustices has to be time-bound. It cannot be an open-ended struggle.”
Watson, who rose to fame in the Harry Potter films, said she had been encouraged by the response to the campaign so far.
Not only has the HeforShe conference video been viewed over 11mn times, but it has also sparked 1.2bn social media conversations and spurred all kinds of action, she said.
“I’ve had my breath taken away when a fan told me that since watching my speech, she has stopped herself being beaten up by her father,” Watson said.
UN Secretary General Ban Ki-moon said during a visit to India last week he had recruited Prime Minister Narendra Modi, Nobel laureate Kailash Satyarthi and legendary cricket player Sachin Tendulkar to join the campaign.
“Our world will not change until men think differently about their roles and what it means to be a man. We can do that most successfully when we enlist men to speak to other men,” Ban said.


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