The Daily Courier

Strikes, protests, holidays mark Internatio­nal Women’s Day

Women in nations across the globe rally under the slogan Balance for Better

- By BARRY HATTON And ARITZ PARRA

MADRID — Marches and protests were held Friday across the globe to mark Internatio­nal Women’s Day under the slogan #Balancefor­Better, with calls for a more gender-balanced world.

The day, sponsored by the United Nations since 1975, celebrates women’s achievemen­ts and aims to further their rights.

“I do not accept a world that tells my granddaugh­ters that economic equality can wait for their granddaugh­ter’s granddaugh­ters,” said U.N. Secretary-General Antonio Guterres.

He spoke at a commemorat­ion at U.N. headquarte­rs in New York, saying “nationalis­t, populist and austerity agendas add to inequality with policies that curtail women’s rights.”

Millions of others around the world demanded equality amid a persistent salary gap, violence and widespread inequality.

EUROPE

Police in the Ukrainian capital Kyiv detained three people as far-right demonstrat­ors tried to provoke activists protesting domestic and sexual violence.

About 300 people gathered on Mykhailivs­ka Square in central Kyiv on Friday for the women’s rights demonstrat­ion. Several dozen far-right demonstrat­ors stood nearby, holding placards reading “God! Homeland! Patriarchy!” and “Feminism is destroying Ukrainian families.”

In Spain, where women’s rights have become one of the hot topics in the run-up to a general election next month, many female employees didn’t show up to work Friday. Others also halted domestic work or left to men the care of children and ill or elderly people.

In the evening, cities across the country lit landmark buildings with purple lights as hundreds of thousands poured into the streets.

“We are getting killed and we are getting lower salaries for being women, but that’s just the tip of the iceberg,” said Sara Baladron, a 27-year-old pharmacist joining the protest in central Madrid.

In neighbouri­ng Portugal, the Cabinet observed a minute of silence Thursday as part of a day of national mourning it decreed for victims of domestic violence. Portuguese police say 12 women have died this year in domestic violence incidents — the highest number over the same period in 10 years.

Pope Francis hailed the “irreplacea­ble contributi­on of women” to fostering peace.

“Women make the world beautiful, they protect it and keep it alive,” the Argentine Jesuit said.

Francis has vowed to give more decisionma­king roles to women in the Catholic Church, where the priesthood —and therefore the highest ranks of authority— is reserved for men. Some feminists bristle at Francis’ frequent use of the term “feminine genius” and his focus on women as mothers.

In Germany, topless feminist protesters went to one of the country’s most famous redlight districts in Hamburg and pulled down a metal barrier wall intended to keep out women — other than prostitute­s.

A half-dozen women belonging to the Femen activist group had the slogan “No brothels for women” written on their bare back in black lettering.

Legally, all women are allowed to enter the street, but in reality most women obey the signs saying, “Entry only for men 18+.”

In France, the first Simone Veil prize went Friday to a Cameroonia­n activist who has worked against forced marriages and other violence against girls and women. Aissa Doumara Ngatansou was married against her will at age 15 but insisted upon continuing her studies as a young wife. She has since turned her attention to victims of Boko Haram extremists.

The French award is named for the trailblazi­ng French politician and Holocaust survivor Veil, who spearheade­d the fight to legalize abortion.

Meanwhile in Russia, Internatio­nal Women’s Day is a public holiday but it mostly lauds gender roles that are now outdated. As is his custom every year, President Vladimir Putin gave a speech thanking women for their patience, good grace and support.

“You manage to do everything: both at work and at home and at the same time you remain beautiful, charismati­c, charming, the centre of gravity for the whole family, uniting it with your love,” Putin said.

In Turkey, four female members of Turkey’s gendarmeri­e units found an unusual way of marking the day: rappelling down from Istanbul’s 15 July Martyrs’ Bridge connecting the city’s European and Asian sides and into the waters of the iconic Bosporus.

Later, riot police in Istanbul fired tear gas to disperse thousands of demonstrat­ors who tried to march along the city’s main pedestrian avenue to mark Internatio­nal Women’s Day. Authoritie­s said the march was unauthoriz­ed.

ASIA

In India, hundreds of women marched on the streets of New Delhi demanding an end to domestic violence, sexual attacks and discrimina­tion in jobs.

Boys are prized more than girls in India. Thousands of Indian women are killed — often doused in gasoline and burned to death — every year because the groom or his family feel the dowry of the bride is inadequate.

Political parties in India have for years been promising 33 per cent of seats for women in the country’s Parliament, but they have yet to enact legislatio­n to that effect.

In Indonesia’s capital Jakarta, several hundred men and women carried colorful placards calling for an end to discrimina­tive practices such as the terminatio­n of employment for pregnancy and exploitati­ve work contracts.

“Our action today is to urge (the government) for our right to a society that’s democratic, prosperous, equal and free from violence,” said Dian Trisnanti, a labour activist. Girls and women in Indonesia, the world’s fourth most populous country, have equal access to education but face higher unemployme­nt, lower wages and poorer working conditions than men.

Both Koreas marked the day. In the South, women wearing black cloaks and pointed hats marched against what they describe as a “witch hunt” of feminists in a deeply conservati­ve society.

College student Noh Seo-young said that South Korea struggles to accept that women are “also humans” and that women have to fight until they can “walk around safely.”

In the North, where Women’s Day is one of the few national holidays that is not explicitly political in nature, people dressed up for family photo shoots or bought roses for their mothers or wives at the many small, bright orange street stalls in central Pyongyang that sell flowers. The stalls normally do most of their business selling flowers to be placed at the feet of statues to the country’s leaders.

In the Philippine­s, hundreds of women in purple shirts used a noisy march and protest in Manila to call for the ouster of President Rodrigo Duterte, whom they rebuked for the often sexist jokes he cracks and authoritar­ian moves they say are threatenin­g one of Asia’s liveliest democracie­s.

They toppled an ugly head effigy of Duterte from atop paper blocks with slogans depicting him as an American lapdog.

NORTH AMERICA

U.S. President Donald Trump honoured Internatio­nal Women’s Day with a presidenti­al message, saying that the U.S. celebrates women’s “vision, leadership, and courage,” and reaffirms its “commitment to promoting equal opportunit­y for women everywhere.”

On the eve prior, U.S. first lady Melania Trump saluted women from 10 countries for their courage. The recipients of the Internatio­nal Women of Courage Award included human rights activists, police officers and an investigat­ive journalist.

“Courage is what divides those who only talk about change from those who actually act to change,” Mrs. Trump said at a ceremony Thursday that was also attended by Secretary of State Mike Pompeo.

Pompeo separately recognized women in Iran for protesting the requiremen­t that they wear a head covering known as a hijab in public and a Ukrainian activist who died in 2018 after she was attacked with sulfuric acid.

AFRICA

Ethiopian Prime Minister Abiy Ahmed, who named one of the world’s few “genderbala­nced” Cabinets last year, told a gathering that “women are the pillars of the nation and the least recognized for their sacrifices.”

In Nigeria, the U.S. Embassy hosted talks on sexual harassment that included a founder of the recent #ArewaMeToo campaign among women in the country’s conservati­ve, largely Muslim north. And in Niger, first lady Aissata Issoufou Mahamadou oversaw the awards in the Miss Intellect Niger contest.

Women protested against gender-based violence in Kenya’s capital.

“We haven’t gotten to a stage where women are comfortabl­e to come out and say, ‘I was sexually abused,”’ said protester Esther Passaris. “So what we need to do is slowly, slowly grow.”

LATIN AMERICA

In Puerto Rico, hundreds clad in purple Tshirts protested to demand safer housing as the U.S. territory struggles to recover from Hurricane Maria, while others held up signs with the names of more than 20 women reportedly killed by their partners on the island last year.

Amid the protests, Gov. Ricardo Rossello signed an executive order that would in part create a special agency to intervene in domestic violence cases and establish preventive police patrols around the homes and workplaces of women awarded protection orders.

Further south, women in Argentina were galvanized to take to the streets after a bill that would have legalized abortion was rejected last year. They prepared for a large march from Congress to the country’s historic Plaza de Mayo square later in the day, during which they were set to protest against violence.

Meanwhile, similar scenes played out in other South American countries.

Hundreds of women in Bolivia rallied in main cities, carrying giant underwear bearing messages such as, “underwear of an irresponsi­ble and abusive father” and “underwear of a child molester,” as Chilean women also demanded access to free and safe abortions.

 ?? The Associated Press ?? Women hold flares during a march for Internatio­nal Women’s Day in Madrid, Spain, on Friday.
The Associated Press Women hold flares during a march for Internatio­nal Women’s Day in Madrid, Spain, on Friday.
 ?? The Associated Press ?? A trio of women hold a sign with a message that reads in Spanish: “See how we end up,” at a demonstrat­ion in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Friday.
The Associated Press A trio of women hold a sign with a message that reads in Spanish: “See how we end up,” at a demonstrat­ion in Buenos Aires, Argentina, Friday.
 ??  ?? Pakistani women, above left, take part in rally in Islamabad on Friday. Right, women rally in Guatemala City, Friday. During the march people remembered 41 girls that died in a fire two years ago at the state-run Virgen de la Asuncion youth shelter.
Pakistani women, above left, take part in rally in Islamabad on Friday. Right, women rally in Guatemala City, Friday. During the march people remembered 41 girls that died in a fire two years ago at the state-run Virgen de la Asuncion youth shelter.
 ?? The Associated Press ??
The Associated Press

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