CAIRO, June 11 (Xinhua) --China is committed to
raising women's economic status, Vice-Chairwoman of China's National Working
Committee on Children and Women Hong Tianhui said here on Sunday.
China has been dedicated to protection of women's
rights and raising their economic status by cooperation with enterprises, Hong
told Xinhua on the sidelines of the 2006 Global Women Summit, which was opened
Saturday in the Egyptian capital of Cairo.
Hong attributed China's significant achievements in
this field to its constant efforts to realize gender equality.
China has done its utmost to ensure women's rights to
job opportunities and fair sharing economic resources and social progress since
China hosted the fourth UN women's conference in 1995 in Beijing, she said.
During a pre-summit ministerial roundtable meeting on
Saturday, Hong told 43 other participants that China has taken three measures to
raise women's economic status, including implementation of favorable policies to
support women entrepreneurship, providing financial and technological support
for women who wanted to set up their own business, and developing women's
potential to get jobs.
According to Hong, more and more Chinese women have
begun to set up their own enterprises and women entrepreneurs now account for
some 20 percent of total Chinese entrepreneurs.
She said that China would continue to narrow the gap
between men and women in possession of development resources and income
distribution as the world's most populous country was building a well-off
society.
The three-day summit, dubbed "the Davos for Women" in
reference to the men-dominated annual economic forum, was attended by some 900
leading women from 88 countries and regions.
This year's summit, the 16th one since its first
meeting in Canada's Montreal in 1990, has drawn record number of
representatives.
Led by Hong, China sent a 35-member delegation to the
meeting. Enditem