The New Zealand Herald

‘I still have the label of refugee’

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R6. ez Gardi lived in a refugee camp in Pakistan, coming to New Zealand under the refugee quota system at age

After nearly 20 years in Auckland, which she now calls home, Gardi says she still feels like a second-class citizen.

“Legally speaking, I am no longer a refugee, but that title sticks . . . I’m now a New Zealand citizen, but I still have the label of refugee,” she said. “Even when I’m quoted in the media, they’ve always referred to me as ‘refugee’ and that title I think comes to define me.

“It doesn’t make me feel like an ordinary New Zealander like everyone else . . . and sometimes it makes me feel like a second-class citizen.”

Gardi, 25, a solicitor at Chapman Tripp, said women from ethnic minority groups in New Zealand also faced “double discrimina­tion”.

“There already exists inequality against females in all social, economic and political aspects of society, and there’s that added barrier to accessing full rights as a citizen when you’re from an ethnic minority,” she said.

“Personally for me, we know the statistics, we get paid less, are less likely to get promoted than males, we’re under-represente­d in the economic and political spheres and academia.”

Gardi was the first in her family to get into university, where she graduated as a lawyer.

“The legal industry just seems like a different world, it’s predominan­tly male, predominan­tly white and middle class,” she said. “At times it feels like I’m getting into this world that I don’t belong in.”

But Gardi feels there’s a lot more interest now in addressing gender and ethnic inequaliti­es, and she is hopeful for the future.

She has signed up as a member of a new organisati­on, launched today, that is dedicated to championin­g the rights and achievemen­ts of women from indigenous and migrant background­s.

Super Diverse Women has more than 120 foundation members, many of them leaders in their chosen field.

A survey commission­ed by the organisati­on to mark its launch found that the workplace, in particular, still poses gender and ethnic equality issues.

I’m now a New Zealand citizen, but I still have the label of refugee. Lawyer Rez Gardi

Pauline Colmar asked about 300 New Zealanders to assess their experience­s of discrimina­tion and diversity.

Inaugural chairwoman Mai Chen said Maori, Pasifika and Asian respondent­s were looking for more role models like them, particular­ly in governance and management roles.

“[With] an understand­ing that being different visually and in culture and accent can make them a target of discrimina­tion,” Chen added.

“Super diverse women generally remain chronicall­y under-represente­d in the leadership of company boards, and local and central government.”

AUT University Professor of Diversity Edwina Pio said ethnic women sometimes faced “triple discrimina­tion” based on the simultaneo­us interlocki­ng of their gender, ethnicity and minority migrant status. “Despite the concept of fair go, good faith and legislatio­n, the chasm between Read more in the Super Diverse Women series at nzherald.co.nz words and actions rather wide.”

Pio said migrant women had to negotiate themselves beyond perception­s of not only the majority population, but also their own migrant communitie­s.

“This discrimina­tion is a mix of both reality and perception — real in that there are fewer such women in the top echelons of organisati­ons, and perceived in that the dominant population generally looks through a stereotypi­cal view of these women.”

Respondent­s to the Super Diverse Women survey said the discrimina­tion was often subtle, and by and large New Zealand was still a friendly country.

“There are certain segments of society that are casually racist towards Asians, but it’s certainly not unique to New Zealand,” one Chinese respondent said.

A Maori participan­t said white middle and upper-class New Zealand still believed in their dominance. “My issues are related to my workplace and subtle forms of racism which some of my benevolent Pakeha colleagues practise— and take it personally when they are called out.” is frequently

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