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How women will lead us to freedom, justice and peace

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    I was the first woman president
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    of an African nation.
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    And I do believe more countries
    ought to try that.
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    (Laughter)
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    (Applause and cheers)
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    Once the glass ceiling has been broken,
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    it can never be put back together --
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    however one would try to do that.
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    When I assumed the presidency of Liberia
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    in January 2006,
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    we faced the tremendous challenges
    of a post-conflict nation:
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    collapsed economy,
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    destroyed infrastructure,
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    dysfunctional institutions,
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    enormous debt,
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    bloated civil service.
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    We also faced
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    the challenges of those left behind.
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    The primary victims of all civil wars:
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    women and children.
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    On my first day in office,
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    I was excited ...
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    and I was exhausted.
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    It had been a very long climb
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    to where I was.
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    Women had been those who suffered most
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    in our civil conflict,
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    and women had been the ones to resolve it.
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    Our history records
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    many women of strength and action.
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    A President of the United Nations
    General Assembly,
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    a renowned circuit court judge,
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    a president of the University of Liberia.
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    I knew that I had to form
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    a very strong team
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    with the capacity to address
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    the challenges of our nation.
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    And I wanted to put women
    in all top positions.
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    But I knew that was not possible.
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    And so I settled for putting them
    in strategic positions.
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    I recruited a very able economist
    from the World Bank
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    to be our minister of finance,
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    to lead our debt-relief effort.
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    Another to be the minister
    of foreign affairs,
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    to reactivate our bilateral
    and multilateral relationships.
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    The first woman chief of police
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    to address the fears of our women,
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    who had suffered so much
    during the civil war.
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    Another to be the minister of gender,
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    to be able to ensure the protection
    and the participation of women.
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    Over time,
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    the minister of justice,
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    the minister of public works,
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    the minister of agriculture,
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    the minister of commerce and industry.
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    Participation in leadership
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    was unprecedented in my administration.
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    And although I knew
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    that there were not enough women
    with the experience
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    to form an all-women cabinet --
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    as I wanted --
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    I settled to appoint numerous women
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    in junior ministerial positions,
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    as executives,
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    as administrators,
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    in local government,
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    in diplomatic service,
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    in the judiciary,
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    in public institutions.
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    It worked.
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    At the end of 2012,
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    our economic growth
    had peaked at nine percent.
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    Our infrastructure was being
    reconstructed at a very fast pace.
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    Our institutions were functioning again.
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    Our debt of 4.9 billion
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    had been largely canceled.
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    We had good relationships
    with the International Monetary Fund,
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    the World Bank,
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    the African Development Bank.
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    We also had good working relationships
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    with all our sister African countries
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    and many nations all over the world.
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    Our women could sleep
    peacefully at night again,
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    without fear.
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    Our children were smiling again,
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    as I promised them during
    my first inaugural address.
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    The reputation and credibility
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    of our nation,
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    lost in the many years of conflict,
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    were restored.
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    But progress is never guaranteed.
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    And in our legislature, in my first term,
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    women were 14 percent.
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    In the second term,
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    it declined to eight percent,
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    because the environment
    was increasingly toxic.
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    I had my fair shares
    of criticism and toxicity.
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    Nobody is perfect.
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    But there's nothing more predictable
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    than a strong woman
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    who wants to change things,
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    who's brave to speak out,
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    who's bold in action.
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    But I'm OK with the criticism.
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    I know why I made the decisions I made,
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    and I'm happy with the results.
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    But that's why more women
    leaders are needed.
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    For there will always be those
    who will tear us down,
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    who will tear us apart
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    because they want
    the status quo to remain.
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    Although sub-Saharan Africa
    has had major breakthroughs
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    in women's leadership and participation,
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    particularly in the legislature --
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    in parliament, as it's called --
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    so many women,
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    50 percent and over, one of our nations,
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    well over 60 percent,
    the best in the world --
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    but we know that's not enough.
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    While we must be very thankful
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    and applaud the progress we have made,
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    we know that there is much
    more work to be done.
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    The work will have to address
    the lingering vestiges
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    of structural ...
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    something against women.
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    In too many places,
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    political parties
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    are based on patronage,
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    patriarchy,
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    misogyny
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    that try to keep women
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    from their rightful places,
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    that shut them out
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    from taking leadership positions.
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    Too often, women face --
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    while the best performers,
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    while equal or better in competence --
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    unequal pay.
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    And so we must continue to work
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    to change things.
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    We must be able to change
    the stereotyping.
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    We must be able to ensure
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    that those structural barriers
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    that have kept women
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    from being able to have the equity
    they rightfully deserve.
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    And we must also work with men.
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    Because increasingly,
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    there is recognition
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    that full gender equity
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    will ensure a stronger economy,
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    a more developed nation,
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    a more peaceful nation.
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    And that is why we must continue to work.
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    And that is why we're partners.
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    I will be launching a Center
    for Women and Development
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    that will bring together --
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    (Applause)
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    women who have started
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    and are committed
    to their joining of leadership.
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    With women who have excelled
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    and advanced in leadership together.
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    Over a 10-year period,
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    we strongly believe
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    that we will create this wave of women
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    who are prepared to take,
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    unabashedly,
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    intentional leadership and influence
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    throughout society.
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    This is why --
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    (Laughs)
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    at 81, I cannot retire.
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    (Applause and laughter)
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    (Applause and cheers)
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    Women are working for change
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    in Africa.
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    Women are working for change
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    throughout the world.
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    I will be with them,
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    and one of them,
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    forever.
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    (Applause)
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    Thank you for listening.
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    Go out and change the world.
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    (Applause and cheers)
Title:
How women will lead us to freedom, justice and peace
Speaker:
H.E. Ellen Johnson Sirleaf
Description:

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Video Language:
English
Team:
closed TED
Project:
TEDTalks
Duration:
14:11

English subtitles

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