The arrival in Lisbon of a new woman ambassador representing the United Kingdom
is another indication that the gender gap in diplomatic circles is narrowing,
but equality is still some way off.
Throughout most
of history, ‘manliness’ was deemed an essential ingredient in the conduct of
international politics. The English diplomat and politician Sir Harold
Nicholson (1986-1968) once said, “women are prone to qualities of zeal,
sympathy and intuition which, unless kept under the firmest control, are
dangerous qualities in international affairs.”
Diplomatic wives always
had an unpaid, subordinate role to play, but it was a long time before women
managed to pull down the discriminatory barriers and enter the higher echelons
of diplomacy themselves.
The newly arrived
and highly qualified Kirsty Isobel Hayes, like her immediate predecessor at the
British Embassy, Jill Gallard, is married and has two children. The demands
of family life have not prevented her climbing through the ranks since she
joined the Foreign & Commonwealth Office in 1999.
Her most recent
position was Head of the FCO’s International Organisation Department where she
was responsible for policy on the United Nations, the Commonwealth, OSCE, war
crimes and sanctions, and the UK’s
lead negotiator at the 2013 Commonwealth Heads of Government Meeting.
She has had
postings in Washington and Hong Kong, as well
as spending three years in Sri
Lanka where she accompanied her husband who
was then British High Commissioner.
Mrs Hayes is only
Her Majesty’s third female ambassador to Portugal. The first, the formidable
Dame Glynne Evans, expressed serious reservations about the 2003 invasion of Iraq.
In a letter from Lisbon in 2004, Dame
Glynne wrote: “The more we stand by principle the better. Expediency does not
pay. Departing from international humanitarian law even just a little bit is
like being just a little bit pregnant… The Americans may hate our legalism but
that is not to say they are right and we are wrong. I believe we need to fight
back, and hard, for our principles. We should not be ‘gentlemen’ any more, but
warriors - and Amazons.”
Mrs Gillard told us before leaving a month ago
that she had not encountered any disadvantages because of her gender. On the
contrary: “I think the
obvious advantage is that people tend to remember who you are more easily,
simply because there are less female faces around,” she said.
“People are often
more interested in what you say because you’re something of a novelty, and
that’s an advantage too – it’s always good to have an attentive audience!” said
Mrs Gillard.
The number of
female heads of mission currently serving abroad with the British Foreign and
Commonwealth Office is at an all-time high. In 1997 there were just nine; in 2003
there were 18; in 2008 there were 22. The figure now stands at 40.
“There are 193
heads of mission in total – so still work to do, but we’re making progress,” an
FCO spokesperson in London
told us. And…wait for it… the spokesperson with this very positive attitude was
a man!
In addition to Ambassador
Kirsty Hayes, women are in charge of three of the UK Lisbon Embassy’s four sections –
Consular, Trade & Investment and Corporate Services.
The Irish Embassy
in Lisbon has
the distinction of being an all-women mission. It is headed by Ambassador Anne
Webster, who has secondary accreditation to Morocco. A mother of three grown
children, Mrs Webster served in senior positions in Beijing,
Paris, Sydney, at
the UN in New York and most recently as Irish
ambassador in Kampala, Uganda, before taking up her post as Ireland’s first woman ambassador to Lisbon last September.
Well-known for
having two successive women state presidents, Ireland continues to expand its
embassy network and by the end of the year it will have a total of 81 heads of
mission, 22 of them women. That is still just over a quarter but it is up from
18% in 2012 and 23% in 2013.
The summer season
usually sees a number of ambassadors coming and going, but at last count only
17 of the 139 serving in Lisbon
were women. The nations they represent include Israel,
Australia, South Africa, Cuba and even a few Muslim states.
In recent weeks,
Leena Salim Moazzam called on Pakistan’s
President Mamnoon Hussain in Islamabad to
discuss matters regarding her new appointment as Ambassador-designate to
succeed Pakistan’s outgoing
woman envoy in Portugal,
Humaira Hassan.
Much more generally,
Portugal
only began to get to grips with gender equality and associated changes in
family life in the 1980s. Academic reports claim that the big advances made in
the first decade of the new millennium have been significantly curtailed by the
ongoing financial crisis with its accompanying austerity measures.
In the UK, much
fuss was made recently about the ousting from the cabinet of four “male, pale
and stale” ministers – but their
replacement by woman only brought the number of females in the cabinet to five
out of 22.
In the Portuguese
government, three out of the 15 ministers are women. The number of women in
the Portuguese parliament is 72 out of a total of 230. That is over 31% compared
with 23% in the British parliament.
“The United
States government is the world’s strongest advocate for unlocking the power and
potential for progress that women and girls represent around the world,” according
to Secretary of State John Kerry. Fine words, but since the setting up of
diplomatic relations between the US
and Portugal in 1791, only
one of the 68 US ambassadors to Lisbon
has been a woman, Elizabeth Frawley Bagley, who was appointed in 1994. Less
than 19% of the members of the US Congress today are women.
This year’s
elections to the EU parliament produced a record high of 38% women, just 3% up
on the 2009 elections. In recent weeks, Jean-Claude Juncker, the new President
of the European Commission, has been urging member states to pick more female
candidates, saying that a Commission without a strong female representation
would “neither be legitimate nor credible.”
So, women are
still under-represented, but things have moved along since Sir Harold Nicholson
declared women to be “dangerous qualities in international affairs.”
Incidentally, Sir
Harold had an interesting take on gender equality: he was bisexual and so was
his wife with whom he had an ‘open’ marriage. They discussed their mutual homosexual
tendencies frankly and remained devoted to each other and their two children.