Pictured: Branca Moreira Alves, director of UNIFEM - the United Nations Fund for Women in Brazil (left), and Sharon Capeling-Alakija executive director of UNIFEM.
The Female Planet event had a busy schedule. For eleven days, there were about two dozen panels that included such diverse subjects as biodiversity, biotechnology, food, agriculture, land reform, poverty, refugees, the role of networks for women's movements, health, education, population policy , spirituality, sexuality, external debt, militarism and other issues relevant to the environmental and developmental issues. In addition to these activities, the women’s tent was a venue for political meetings, cultural activities, parties, and especially the expression of diversity. Over 30,000 people visited Female Planet during ECO-92. Pictured: Maria de Lourdes Pintasilgo former prime minister of Portugal (left) and Sharon Capeling-Alakija, executive director of UNIFEM – United Nations Fund for Women.