The Asian Age

Understand­ing harassment, in workplaces and in homes

- Rafia Zakaria

It has been a year full of revelation­s. Some of them have been shocking: the corrupt dealings of some political leaders and the lewd habits of other Hollywood producers, all have been exposed on the pages of newspapers. The # MeToo hashtag that began a few months ago gave women who had access to the Internet a venue in which to share the alarming extent and breadth of workplace harassment.

For women, particular­ly those who work or study outside the home, the stories that have been told are painfully familiar: bosses who demand illicit relationsh­ips, superiors who fire women who do not return their advances, the promotions denied, the pay reduced, all making up the horrific landscape of harassment.

According to UN Women, 120 million girls around the world have experience­d forced sexual acts. According to a 2015 survey completed by the charity Action Aid, huge percentage­s of women — 57 per cent in Bangladesh, 79 per cent in India and 87 per cent in Vietnam — report having faced sexual harassment. The misery begins even before they get to work; over half reported that they experience­d harassment by the operators of public transporta­tion that they had to take to get there. If it wasn’t the operators, it was the men they encountere­d on the way to work, men who perceived them as morally loose or available simply because they were on their way to work.

According to the NGO What Works to Prevent Violence Against Women, the harassment is particular­ly bad in South Asia because there is massive “sexual entitlemen­t” in the region.

Often, when a male boss is supervisin­g a team of men and women, he is more likely to give men the opportunit­y to lead projects and avail themselves of promotion opportunit­ies. In their turn, women are considered rude or intractabl­e if they are not acting like “pleasers” and not conforming to the gender stereotype­s that are attached to them.

These attitudes wage differenti­als translate that are, into like sexual harassment problem.

In sum, the workplace is a battlefiel­d for women; if they are lucky enough to never face actual sexual assault, unwanted physical touching, groping, etc, they are still going to be subject to lower pay and to the perception that their commitment to work is not as serious as that of their male counterpar­ts.

In South Asia, the misery follows women back to their homes. In many cases, women have to undertake complex negotiatio­ns with fathers, husbands and brothers to even be able to work. In many cases, women will choose to wear the hijab or burqa and hand over their entire paycheck to their male guardians just to be able to continue to work. The money that they do make and the economic power that they do get by participat­ing in the workforce is hence rendered somewhat superficia­l because the “permission” to work continues to rest with the men of the household.

Recent research focusing on working women in Bangladesh substantia­tes this; women in that itself, a global country were found to be more vulnerable to domestic violence if they worked outside the home. One possible explanatio­n for this is that while their husbands want them to continue earning, they feel that their masculinit­y is somehow impacted by the fact that their wife works outside the home.

Socially and culturally, Pakistan is not that different from Bangladesh. In recent decades, rural- tourban migration and rising education levels of women have meant that many of them are participat­ing in the workforce. While legislatio­n protecting women is being passed, it is rarely enforced and informal surveys of Pakistani working women have revealed that very few of them believe that reporting harassment will actually lead to repercussi­ons for the harassers.

Cultural values that constantly establish male superiorit­y make it almost impossible for legal actions or even internal disciplina­ry actions against harassers to succeed. Men cover up for other men, believing that if their friend, or colleague or brother is discipline­d, then they too could be next. Other women, raised in a culture of male superiorit­y, also cover up for men by routinely blaming the women involved. With everyone covering up for them, it is no surprise at all that no men are punished.

Perhaps a number of men reading this article feel it’s okay to harass women who cross the thresholds of their home and enter the public space. Some of them may rationalis­e their behaviour as just being friendly, as jokes, as good fun. Others may believe that when they pay women to do a certain job, they are automatica­lly entitled to their affection, to their friendship and to their attention.

Still others may imagine that what no one sees, what happens behind office doors or in stairwells or corridors or online, doesn’t hurt or doesn’t matter. Those who think this way are wrong; their mindset would reflect the thinking of sexual harassers who, it can be guaranteed, are detested by the women around them.

By arrangemen­t with Dawn

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