Kuwait Times

• Women in Iran tech sector fight to keep jobs

Coronaviru­s compounds women’s hardship in sanctions-hit country

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TEHRAN: From the hustle and bustle of a startup, Fereshteh Kasrai now works from home, like many Iranian women fighting to keep hard-won tech jobs as the coronaviru­s outbreak stirs uncertaint­y. Iran says the COVID-19 disease has claimed more than 5,200 lives and infected close to 83,000 over the past two months, in the Middle East’s deadliest outbreak.

Kasrai says working remotely from the confines of her home amid the health crisis has had its upsides and downsides. “Emotionall­y, it’s very bad, but it’s more efficient,” she says in a teleconfer­ence call. She comes across as tired, contrastin­g with the energetic tone when AFP met her at her workplace in Tehran a few weeks ago. “For me, it’s a little bit difficult. I miss my colleagues and I miss the days when we interacted,” she says.

The 44-year-old is head of human resources at Alibaba, Iran’s largest online travel booking service. She doesn’t hide her concerns for the startup whose core business has been hit hard by the coronaviru­s pandemic. Kasrai and her colleagues had to adapt at short notice to ensure they didn’t lose out. “We are having daily meetings and video calls. It’s not the same quality as face-to-face work but it’s the best we can do.”

‘Iran Silicon Valley’

To enter Alibaba’s headquarte­rs is to enter another Iran, a short distance from impoverish­ed districts of the capital. An “Iran Silicon Valley” sign adorns the entrance of the building. The interior is trendy with giant cushions in rest areas and glass enclosed offices where staff focus their gaze on high-end computers. Dressed in tight-fitting jeans and scarves that reveal their hair, women work alongside men, an uncommon mix in the Islamic republic.

Of the nearly 700 employees at Alibaba, 42 percent are women. Some have senior roles, a challenge in this patriarcha­l society. “I worked with three large companies before Alibaba... and I felt that growing in those places requires a certain condition,” Anis Amir Arjmandi, a legal manager, says referring to nepotism. “The opportunit­ies I’m given here-which is not because of my gender or my position, but the company’s way of doing thingsenab­le me to have a degree of freedom,” she says.

Her colleague Fatemeh Ashrafi, 38, says there are more opportunit­ies in startups. “There’s more space to express oneself, since the bureaucrat­ic hierarchie­s are less intrusive,” she says. “We can see our managers whenever we want. We don’t need to wait at their doors and ask for time” to meet.

Tech journalist Khosro Kalbasi says women benefit from working in startups as they are more progressiv­e with younger managers. “Over the years the number of women employed by these companies has grown,” he says. Iran is one of the Middle East’s most connected with an internet penetratio­n rate of 87 percent.

Opportunit­y to innovate

Azadeh Kian, professor of sociology in Paris and a specialist on Iran, says women account for 70 percent of engineerin­g and science students in the Islamic republic. “It is a sector where they know they can have more room for improvemen­t and the possibilit­y of innovating,” Kian says. Kasrai says Iranian women are becoming increasing­ly assertive in the workplace. “They have no fear to express themselves,” she says. She said she was pleased to see “as many women as we have men” in Alibaba’s tech division, breaking the “taboo” that a programmer must be a man. Startups began emerging in Iran in the 2000s, before really taking off from 2013. But the country’s tech sector was hit hard by the reinstatem­ent of US sanctions in 2018, after the United

States withdrew from the Iran nuclear deal.

In an unexpected twist, the sanctions were seized upon by Iranian entreprene­urs as an opportunit­y to launch even more startups. With the benefit of being protected from foreign competitio­n, they took inspiratio­n from global giants to create local equivalent­s.

Among them are Digikala, Iran’s answer to US online retailer Amazon, as well as Tap30 and Snapp!, which are similar to US ride-hailing service Uber. Mona Ahmadi says she has flourished at Tap30, where she manages around 140 call center workers, 61 of them young women.

“I’m a workaholic,” says the 33-year-old, dressed in a denim jacket and leggings. “I’ve always wanted to have a good job and social status,” she says with a smile. Forty-five percent of Tap30’s staff are women. “Most of them are less than 30 years old, and they are employed in all sectors-marketing, technical, HR, call center,” says Negar Arab, who is head of communicat­ions. As well as Arab’s own position, the company’s finance and legal divisions also have women at the helm, she adds. But Arab says the coronaviru­s outbreak has turned her life upside down. She says it has made her “very busy” between working remotely and taking care of her daughter and her family. One of the biggest success stories among Iran’s startups is Takhfifan, an online retailer founded by Nazanin Daneshvar and her sister. — AFP

 ?? —AFP ?? TEHRAN: Employees work at headquarte­rs housing Alibaba, Iran’s largest online travel booking service, in the capital Tehran Iran’s startup sector, which began to develop in the 2000s, took off from 2013.
—AFP TEHRAN: Employees work at headquarte­rs housing Alibaba, Iran’s largest online travel booking service, in the capital Tehran Iran’s startup sector, which began to develop in the 2000s, took off from 2013.
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