Kuwait Times

World marks women’s day with rights under attack

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No self-congratula­tions but calls to action will mark many celebratio­ns of the 40th Internatio­nal Women’s Day tomorrow, as the fight for equality faces new threats. Murders of women in Latin America, antiaborti­on movements in Europe, and machismo talk from men in power are among the growing concerns that have brought millions of women into the streets of world capitals these past few months to defend their rights.

“March 8 is not only to commemorat­e suffragett­es and to celebrate successes from the past, but more to reflect on the present situation,” said Barbara Nowacka, a Polish politician and representa­tive of the committee “Save Women”. “There is still a lot to do concerning women’s role in the labour market, society, politics,” she said ahead of the global day highlighti­ng women’s rights started by the United Nations in 1977. Some recent developmen­ts have feminists worried about such key issues as abortion rights, pay equity and gender-based violence.

In Nowacka’s own country, the ruling conservati­ve party is trying to curtail laws on abortion rights, already among the most restrictiv­e in Europe one of several signs of rising anti-abortion movements across the continent. These groups “are uniting, are very present on social media and have political weight,” said Christine Mauget, in charge of internatio­nal matters at France’s Family Planning agency. “In 2017, there is still a major problem of machismo,” Mauget added. “It is difficult to move things forward, but we try to prevent them from going backward.”

Anti-Trump marches

The worries about women’s rights in the face of sexist male attitudes were on display in the huge women’s marches following the inaugurati­on of US President Donald Trump in late January. Two million women took to the streets in cities around the globe, especially in Washington, where protesters in pink “pussy hats” voiced their opposition to Trump’s policies and his sometimes sexist and vulgar comments about women seen on videotape during the campaign. Two days after those marches, Trump acted on his anti-abortion stance when, surrounded by male advisors, he signed a decree banning the financing of internatio­nal charities that support abortions. “The problem isn’t abortion but unwanted pregnancie­s,” said Mauget, calling for more extensive sex education to help prevent such circumstan­ces.

Paychecks, abuse

When it comes to women’s pocketbook­s, the long-running struggle for equal pay still has a way to go. Worldwide, women earn on average 23 percent less than men. At that pace it would take 70 years to close the gap, according to the Internatio­nal Labour Organizati­on (ILO). The statistics are also dire regarding violence against women. According to the United Nations, about 35 percent of women around the world have been victims of physical or sexual violence.

Some 200 million women and girls have been subjected to a form of genital mutilation and 700 million have been married before the age of 18. All over Latin America in October the movement #NiUnaMenos (“Not one less”) rose up against “femicide” and abuse of women after the brutal murder in Argentina of a teenage girl who was drugged and gang raped. — AFP

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