Inspiring and successful Girls Summit
The Girls Summit took place on Wednesday and was designed to facilitate the development of recommendations by participants and motivating delegates to be relayed to key decision-makers. The day started with encouraging opening remarks from moderator Kim Chakanetsa, journalist and presenter of The Conversation on the BBC World Service, followed by a keynote speech of Barbara Pesce Monteiro, Director of the United Nations in Brussels, and an inspiring call to action by Aline Zeler, captain of the Belgian national women’s football team, the Belgian Red Flames. The summit included a panel discussion between Kim and a group of youth delegates from around the world. The inspirational panel included Sreypich Houen, a 16-year-old activist from Cambodia and member of World Vision Citizens voice; Motshedisi Likate, Founder of Beat She Can and Save the Children Girl Champion from South Africa; and the EWL delegate from our member YWCA, Ruxandra Diaconescu, board member of YWCA Romania. You can read Ruxandra’s speech for the Summit here. It was clear that the benefits of intergenerational support are invaluable; nurturing the passions of young girls and thriving activists who make real change within their communities remains an important factor in helping girls to thrive and succeed. The summit then divided into three separate workshops focused on the specific topic that affects girls globally today: education, leadership, and ending violence against girls. “Education develops the fullest potential in women and girls” Antonella Azzilonna, EWL youth delegate, Volunteer at World Association of Girl Guides and Girl Scouts

Jobs for Girls workshop bring ideas!
The day concluded with two workshops on Jobs for Girls with keynote speakers EU Commissioner for Competition Margrethe Vestager and MEP Assistant Lea Haas. Commissioner Vestager provided real insight into her own journey and connected with the participants on common ground with genuine and valuable insight in how to work toward becoming a woman in power making changes. To the girls in the room Vestager advised, if you want to engage in your society you have to overcome. She emphasised that you can always start small and begin to include others to so that girls can start making changes together. Lea Haas is head of the office of MEP Terry Reintke and shared her experience as a young woman working in politics, and more specifically in the European Parliament. Discussion with participants included the obstacles for women to engage in politics, the prevalent sexist culture of the political world, and the lack of prioritisation of women’s rights into political programmes. Several youth delegates shared their experience in their country, and got vitalised by Lea’s optimism and commitment! The participants were then treated to a presentation by Manon Van Hoorebeke, Digital Girl of the year in 2014 and only 14 years old! Co-organised by EWL, Save the Children and the Digital Leadership Institute, the workshops provided a delegation of young girls from across Europe with valuable advice on how to become a woman in a leadership role, how to tackle gender stereotypes and how to pursue a career in the tech industry.EWL #HerNetHerRights online conference
For EWL, another highlight of the Week was our online conference #HerNetHerRights, which took place on 13 October. More than 61 persons participated in this online event, which gathered decision-makers, activists, researchers, frontline workers, and EWL members, to discuss the scale of online violence against women and girls, and was to eradicate it. Visit our webpage #HerNetHerRights to find out more about the project and watch the online conference. Click here to get a fantastic summary of the online conference and the tweetchat, thanks to a Storify presentation. The blog #NewMediaActivism has also issued a dynamic article about the online conference; you can find it here. The blog #NewMediaActivism has also issued a dynamic article about the online conference; you can find it here. The European Week of Action for Girls was certainly a success and the EWL was proud to take part and make sure that several EWL youth delegates were actively involved throughout the week. They all had the opportunity to engage at EU level, experience Brussels and to connect with each other in order to build a strong and inspiring network of women who will lead change in the future! You can find a short video of the Summit and more information about the events below.