The Phnom Penh Post

‘Rising’ to a challenge

- Martin de Bourmont

ABOUT 100 women’s rights activists and their supporters turned out yesterday for a “One Billion Rising” gathering in Phnom Penh, though the event’s relatively sparse male attendance highlighte­d what some attendees consider the greatest obstacle to gender equality in Cambodia – getting the message to those who need it most.

The Rising rallies take place in major cities all over the world each February, and seek to combat gender-based stereotypi­ng and violence. Held in the auditorium of the American Interconti­nental Institute’s Tuol Kork campus, the gathering featured interactiv­e song and dance numbers, face-painting, a comedy skit and short films condemning gender-based violence and its gratuitous depictions in Cambodian pop culture.

Ros Sopheap, an organiser of the events since 2013 and executive director of Gender and Developmen­t for Cambodia (GADC), said that awareness of and enthusiasm for the event had steadily increased over the years. Neverthele­ss, yesterday’s crowd was overwhelmi­ngly well-educated and female, with strong ties to NGOs, and while men were present, they constitute­d a small minority.

Chansolind­a Cheath, who works as a project officer for SILAKA, an NGO that offers train- ing programs and consulting services for other Cambodian NGOs, said that she hoped One Billion Rising would provide young women with “more confidence”, but also hoped to see more men attend in the future.

“We need men to understand women’s rights,” says Cheath. “If you only provide training to women, only they know their rights,” she said.

Chandy Eng, a former GADC staff member who recently completed a master’s degree in internatio­nal human rights in Thailand, agreed.

“When men see ‘violence against women’, they get awkward,” she sighed. “They say ‘why violence against women, but not men?’”

To counter this ignorance of gender-based discrimina­tion and violence, Eng asked her boyfriend Pisey Lay to join her at the gathering.

Lay, a 26-year-old who works for the Ministry of Agricultur­e, Forestry and Fisheries, acknowledg­ed his own struggles with sexism.

“It took years,” he said. “Whenever I talk to my friends or relatives they say, ‘Men must be the decision makers’.”

And though he hoped One Billion Rising would help sensitise other young men to genderbase­d issues in Cambodia, Lay said he remained sceptical.

“People will post about this on social media,” he said. “It helps, but only a little; we come from an environmen­t where men run everything.”

 ?? HONG MENEA ?? A woman participat­es in One Billion Rising, a global event for action against gender inequality, in Phnom Penh yesterday.
HONG MENEA A woman participat­es in One Billion Rising, a global event for action against gender inequality, in Phnom Penh yesterday.

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