In this special episode, Dr Yemisi Akinbobola takes listeners behind the scenes of the 70th session of the Commission on the Status of Women (CSW70), held at the United Nations headquarters in New York in March 2025.
Dr Yemisi opens with a striking moment from day one, where WABC TV anchor Sade Baderinwa reminded the delegates that when justice fails, women pay the price. But the most powerful intervention came from Malala Yousafzai, who challenged the world to confront selective justice. She spoke about Afghan women being barred from medical training and how the oppression of women is frequently excused as culture. Malala called it what it was: gender apartheid. In her words, speeches do not protect girls. Law, accountability, and political courage do.
The theme of CSW70 was strengthening legal systems and eliminating discriminatory laws. Yet, as UN Women Executive Director Sima Bahous admitted, no country fully meets its obligation to ensure women’s full access to justice. For the first time in 70 years, the agreed-upon conclusions were adopted by vote rather than consensus, with the United States raising objections over gender ideology, sexual health rights, and even the word intersectionality. UN Secretary General António Guterres spoke plainly during a town hall, urging everyone to stop using diplomatic language. He said that when we push against patriarchy, patriarchy pushes back.
Throughout the week, Dr Yemisi attended critical side events, including one hosted by South Africa, reflecting on lessons from its G20 presidency and the historic 1956 women’s march against apartheid. She also attended the screening of Daughters of Chibok, a documentary about mothers told to wait patiently while their daughters remained missing, a heartbreaking reminder of the 2014 abductions in Nigeria. Another session focused on just transitions in energy and AI, highlighting how women in Nigeria’s Niger Delta hold communities together while being shut out of decisions regarding the oil on their land.
A pivotal conversation took place at the BBC Studios event on AI, deepfakes, and digital safety. Statistics show that 90 to 95 per cent of deepfakes are sexualized images targeted at women. Behind those numbers were names: Fatou Baldeh, a Gambian women’s rights activist who faced threats of rape and death for campaigning against female genital mutilation, and investigative journalist Abena Zara, whose family history was fabricated by AI-generated misinformation. Both women faced horrendous attacks for daring to speak up. AI is not neutral. It has been weaponized to discredit women truth tellers.
Dr Yemisi closes with five truths from CSW70; listen to the full episode to learn those truths.
CHAPTERS
00:00 Defending Gender Progress at CSW70
01:27 When Justice Fails, Women Pay the Price
03:07 Consensus Broken After 70 Years
04:18 The UN Secretary General’s Warning
05:34 South Africa’s Legacy and the 1956 Women’s March
07:01 A Call to Action for African Media
08:16 Leadership, Purpose, and the Mothers of Chibok
09:05 Women Shut Out of Oil Decisions in Niger Delta
11:20 When AI Becomes a Weapon Against Women
12:24 Five Truths from CSW70
If this episode resonated with you, subscribe, leave a review, and share it with someone who needs to hear it. Your support helps amplify conversations that strengthen media ecosystems across Africa.
Interested in joining a future episode of Her Media Diary? Email: yemisi@africanwomeninmedia.com (mailto:yemisi@africanwomeninmedia.com), and join the ongoing conversation using #HerMediaDiary.
Her Media Diary is produced by African Women in Media (AWiM).
Follow African Women in Media (AWiM):
Facebook (https://www.facebook.com/share/1ARgsBptVC/)
LinkedIn (https://www.linkedin.com/company/african-women-in-media/)
TikTok (https://www.tiktok.com/@realawim?_r=1&_t=ZS-93QVDxwCcv1)
X (Twitter) (https://x.com/RealAWiM)
Instagram (https://www.instagram.com/africanwomeninmedia?igsh=MXA4NTc4NjF1NTFnbQ==)

