The World’s Most Powerful Women: April 6

Good morning, WMPW readers! The United Nations may get its first female secretary general, a new law in Japan forces large companies to reveal their plans to promote women, and a former Brazilian nanny has become a successful hair care business owner. Got a tip for a future issue? Reach out to me at: laura.cohn@gmail.com or @laurascohn. Have a great Wednesday!

 

 

 

See original article on Fortune.com

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THE BIG STORY

[bs-title]A female first at the UN?[/bs-title]

[bs-content]Now that New Zealand has put forth former PM Helen Clark as a nominee for secretary general of the United Nations, there are four women in the running for the post. Along with Clark, former Croatian Foreign Minister Vesna Pusic, former Moldovan Foreign Minister Natalia Gherman, and the Bulgarian head of UNESCO, Irina Bokova, are up for the job. Clark, currently the chief of the UN Development Programme, accepted her government's nomination with utmost grace. "It is an extremely challenging position, but I'm used to that," she said. The world body, which has never had a female secretary general, has been under pressure to select a woman for the job ever since the presidents of its General Assembly and Security Council urged the nomination of female candidates. The new secretary general is likely to be named in September, and expected to take office in January--the same month a new U.S. president will be sworn in. Will both jobs be held by women?[/bs-content]

[bs-link link="http://time.com/4281653/helen-clark-united-nations-secretary-general-un-female-women/" source="Time"]

[bs-share text="A female first at the UN?" link="http://time.com/4281653/helen-clark-united-nations-secretary-general-un-female-women/"]

EUROPE/MIDDLE EAST/AFRICA

[bs-title]Girding Google[/bs-title]
[bs-content]European Union competition chief Margrethe Vestager won't leave Google alone. Vestager said in an interview that the EU is "advancing" its probe on the Adsense ad service and Android mobile system belonging to Alphabet, the search-engine's parent. At issue: whether the firm is abusing its dominance. This follows a move last spring when Vestager filed formal charges against Google for giving "an unfair advantage to its own comparison shopping service, in breach of EU antitrust rules."[/bs-content]
[bs-link link="http://www.wsj.com/articles/eu-presses-inquiries-into-google-parent-alphabet-1459799577" source="Wall Street Journal"]
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