Deutsche Welle (English edition)

More violence, less income: Arab women bear the brunt of COVID-19, study finds

A new survey by Arab Barometer adds numbers to the narrative that COVID has led to a harsher reality for women in the Middle East and North Africa.

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The COVID-19 pandemic has turned Heba Mordaa's life upside down. "Ever since the lockdowns started in March 2020, my work has been deteriorat­ing," the 29-year-old manicurist and mother of three in Beirut says. "At first, the shop owner deducted our salaries because we had no customers coming in. Then, in July 2020, the owner decided that we will start offering home service, which my husband completely refused. I had to leave my job in August 2020 and stay at home. Since I am a mother of three kids, I remained without a job for the whole school year 2020-2021."

Mordaa's profession­al set back and her involuntar­y return to life as housewife and stay-athome mom is a common COVID-related turn of events for many Arab women. "Women are bearing the brunt at home and at work," concludes the latest Arab Barometer's survey on the consequenc­es of the COVID-19 pandemic on women in the Middle East.

Working women had not much ground to lose

Even before the pandemic, the Middle East has had the lowest female labor participat­ion

of the world, with an average of 27%, according to data from the World Bank. And this situation has been exacerbate­d by the pandemic, as a recent paper by the Internatio­nal Labor Organizati­on (ILO), a specialize­d agency of the UN, pointed out.

After the Americas, the Arab States have experience­d the second highest drop in the number of employed women: by 4.1% — in comparison to 1.8% of men between 2019 and 2020. "The disproport­ionate job and income losses suffered by women during the pandemic will persist in the near future," the ILO report concluded.

Furthermor­e, the ILO projects for this year that the employment-to-population ratio for women will stand at only 14.3% compared to 70.8% for men.

Uptick in domestic violence in Jordan and Lebanon

Another pressing concern in

the Middle East is the uptick in domestic violence during the pandemic.

At least a quarter of women in the surveyed Arab countries reported an increase in genderbase­d violence (GBV) in the first round of the Arab Barometer survey, conducted between July and October 2020. In Morocco and Algeria, 47% of women reported an increase, in Tunisia even 69%.

But in the latest round of the survey, conducted between March and April 2021, the numbers dropped to 25% in Morocco, to 24% in Algeria and to 62% in Tunisia. In Libya it increased slightly from 26% to 29% while it skyrockete­d in Jordan from 29% to 55% and in Lebanon from 23% to 43%.

"Jordan and Lebanon in particular had massive spikes in daily case rate just before our latest survey was conducted. We don't have a causal link between domestic violence and COVID-19 case rates, but the correlatio­n suggests it is worth further research," MaryClare Roche, author of the Arab Barometer study, told DW.

Mary Lawlor, UN Special Rapporteur on the situation of human rights defenders, emphasized that "new restrictio­ns of movement mean it's even harder for women to reach places of safety when threatened," she told DW.

The Dublin-based Women Human Rights Defender highlighte­d that "it is important that networks between Women Human Rights Defenders are fostered. There is strength in numbers, so when, even virtually, they are better equipped to address the common challenges they face, and support one other when they're at risk."

Structural obstacles bar women from the workforce

Opening up possibilit­ies and reducing societal barriers for women in the Middle East and North Africa are considered the most sustainabl­e ways to support women who suffer from domestic violence. "Increasing female labor force participat­ion can help protect women twofold: First, by decreasing the amount of time a woman spends with her abuser, and second, by providing some degree of economic independen­ce from her abuser," Roche told DW.

Providing an adequate framework, however, mainly lies in the hands of government­s. "When we surveyed citizens in MENA about perceived barriers to women joining the workforce, structural barriers, i.e. barriers the government can affect, were the most popular. These barriers were lack of childcare options, lack of transporta­tion, and low wages," Roche added.

Her conclusion is that if government­s create policies that increase public transporta­tion, after school and early childcare programs, and there are increases in standard wages, there will be more financiall­y independen­t women in the Middle East.

For Beirut's Heba Mordaa, at least the financial insecurity had an end in June this year. "I started another job and hope that no more lockdowns will be imposed as my income is necessary for the family in these difficult financial circumstan­ces," she told DW.

 ??  ?? The pandemic saw many working mothers in the Middle East return to being stay-athome moms
The pandemic saw many working mothers in the Middle East return to being stay-athome moms
 ??  ?? This teenage-bride was disfigured in an acid attack by her husband
This teenage-bride was disfigured in an acid attack by her husband

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