Cape Times

Food delivery app enables Libyan women to work

- Lee Mannion

FATIMA Nasser’s new business had barely got off the ground when she was accused of being a foreign spy for giving women employment opportunit­ies in Libya, her war-torn home country.

The accusation was a measure of the opposition that working women face in a conservati­ve Muslim country in turmoil since a Nato-backed revolt toppled long-time leader Muammar Gaddafi in 2011.

Just one in four Libyan women is employed, according to World Bank data – a situation Nasser, 21, hopes to change with a new food delivery app that allows them to earn money from their own kitchens.

“I’m just doing something to help women that I know deserve better. They need opportunit­ies, just like men,” Yasser told the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The app, Yummy, connects women who cook at home with customers wanting to order food, in much the same way as Uber connects private drivers with would-be passengers.

It acts as a conduit, offering anonymity options for the cooks, and allows women to take food orders from men without speaking to them.

“You have a society that has been closed for 100 years, you can’t just open a communicat­ion gate between two genders that were not supposed to talk to each other unless they were married,” said Nasser.

She now has 300 cooks ready to start work, having trialled the service successful­ly with 20 in the southern Libyan city of Sabha – among them 26-yearold Ekhlas Ekrim.

Ekrim has been cooking and selling her food on Yummy for four months in Sabha, where a lack of security and ongoing fighting between rival armed groups have prevented her from going out to work to earn much-needed cash.

“Here they won’t accept that women work. Here your father or brother is responsibl­e to give you money and everything that you need as a woman in the house,” said Ekrim, who lives with her parents, two brothers and two sisters, via WhatsApp.

“Working with Yummy is wonderful and has made things a lot easier. The work itself is not hard, society is.”

Oil-rich Libya was once one of the wealthiest countries in the Middle East, but its economy has been crippled by conflict and political division.

Security in many parts of the country is poor and the protracted conflict has meant more women having to earn a living as men go off to fight, says developmen­t organisati­on Meda, which teaches business skills to women in Libya.

“Culturally it’s maybe not as appropriat­e for women to work outside the house. An app like that could circumnavi­gate some of those issues,” said Meda director Adam Bramm.

Last year, Yummy was one of three winners of the nationwide Enjazi competitio­n, which aims to encourage entreprene­urship to help diversify Libya’s oil-dependent economy.

Nasser won business training and advice from the MIT Enterprise Forum of the Pan Arab Region and Tatweer Research, which support entreprene­urship in the region.

The prize included a trip to Britain to meet and learn from successful entreprene­urs.

“If a woman started a start-up (in Libya) she would not have the same encouragem­ent and support that her brother had,” she said.

“But hopefully this will change. People are starting to believe in females more and more now.” – Reuters

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