The Prince George Citizen

Swiss women hold general strike

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Women across Switzerlan­d walked off the job, burned bras and blocked traffic Friday in a day of demonstrat­ions to demand fairer pay, more equality and an end to sexual harassment and violence.

It was the first such protests in the Alpine nation in 28 years.

Discontent over sexism and workplace inequality in prosperous Switzerlan­d underpinne­d the women’s strike.

Many protesters were also demanding more pay specifical­ly for domestic workers, teachers and caregivers – jobs typically held by women.

Swiss female lawmakers – mostly decked out in purple, the movement’s colour – streamed out of parliament Friday in the capital of Bern, where several thousand women were demonstrat­ing, public broadcaste­r RTS reported.

Hundreds of marchers also blocked roads near the main train station in Zurich, the country’s financial centre.

Demonstrat­ors in Geneva’s Parc Bertrand hoisted a banner showing that only eight per cent of jobs in engineerin­g were held by women in Switzerlan­d, in contrast to 91 per cent of the country’s domestic help jobs.

The Swiss Federal Statistics office says women on average earned 12 per cent less than men for similar work – the so-called “gender pay gap” – as of 2016, the latest figures available.

Also in Geneva, demonstrat­ors bedecked the statues of four bearded Protestant reformers with purple-colored scarves and put up alternativ­e street names honouring women underneath the official street names, which have been given to men.

Earlier in Lausanne, hundreds of women rallied at the city’s cathedral around midnight Thursday and marched downtown to set wooden pallets on fire, throwing items like neckties and bras into the inferno.

A few women scaled the cathedral to shout out the hour, a Swiss tradition rarely carried out by women.

In Lucerne, hundreds of women staged a sit-down protest in front of the city’s theatre, according to the Tages-Anzeiger newspaper, and some of the paper’s female reporters joined in.

People across the country wore face paint or stickers. In symbolic gestures large and small, businesses showed their support for the protests.

The Roche Tower in Basel, the northweste­rn city’s highest skyscraper, lit up in the logo of the movement. Restaurant­s and stores hung purple balloons and the strikers’ logos.

Swiss women were urged to leave their workplaces at 3:24 p.m. – the time when organizers figured women should stop working to earn proportion­ally as much as men in a day.

Vanessa Trub, a Geneva pastor and vicepresid­ent of a city associatio­n of ministers and deacons, said protesters on Friday were also demanding longer paternity leave – now just one day in Switzerlan­d – to get men to help out more with child care.

The Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on reported recently that Switzerlan­d is one of the worst nations in Europe and Central Asia when it comes to the post-high school education gap between the sexes, especially in the STEM science fields.

The Swiss statistics office also says of the 249 homicides recorded in the country between 2009 and 2018, 75 per cent of the victims were women and girls.

Friday’s events evoked the protests on June 14, 1991, that drew hundreds of thousands of Swiss women out to condemn discrimina­tion.

The date was 20 years after Swiss women won the federal right to vote and a decade after sexual equality became law.

One Swiss region, Appenzell Innerrhode­n, did not allow all Swiss women to vote in local elections until it was ordered by a court to do so in 1990.

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 ?? AP PHOTOS ?? Women protest during a nationwide women’s strike Friday in Lucerne, top, and Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, above. A woman protests in front of the University Hospitals in Geneva.
AP PHOTOS Women protest during a nationwide women’s strike Friday in Lucerne, top, and Lausanne, Switzerlan­d, above. A woman protests in front of the University Hospitals in Geneva.
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