Los Angeles Times

On Women’s Day, a call for gender parity

U.N. warns of erosion of hard-won progress. Events around world celebrate gains but also highlight gaps.

- By Ciarán Giles and Mari Yamaguchi Giles and Yamaguchi write for the Associated Press.

MADRID — From demands for constituti­onal rights in Islamabad to calls for economic parity in Manila, Paris and Madrid, Internatio­nal Women’s Day demonstrat­ions in cities around the world Wednesday highlighte­d the unfinished work of providing equity for half of the planet’s population.

Although activists in some places celebrated political and legal advances, observance­s also pointed to repression in countries including Afghanista­n and Iran, and the large numbers of women and girls who face sexual assaults and domestic violence globally.

United Nations Secretary-General António Guterres noted this week that women’s rights were “abused, threatened and violated” around the world, and said gender equality won’t be achieved for 300 years given the current pace of change.

Progress won over decades is vanishing because “the patriarchy is fighting back,” Guterres said.

Even in countries where women have considerab­le freedom, there have been recent setbacks. This was the first Internatio­nal Women’s Day since the U.S. Supreme Court ended the constituti­onal right to abortion last year and many states adopted restrictio­ns on abortion.

The United Nations recognized Internatio­nal Women’s Day in 1977, but the occasion has its roots in labor movements of the early 20th century. The day is commemorat­ed in different ways and to varying degrees in different countries.

The United Nations identified Afghanista­n as the most repressive country in the world for women and girls since the Taliban takeover in 2021. The U.N. mission said the Taliban was “imposing rules that leave most women and girls effectivel­y trapped in their homes.”

The Islamist rulers have banned girls’ education beyond sixth grade and barred women from public spaces such as parks and gyms. Women must cover themselves from head to toe and are also barred from working at national and internatio­nal nongovernm­ental organizati­ons.

Afghan women’s rights campaigner Zubaida Akbar told the U.N. Security Council that women and girls in the country are facing “the worst crisis for women’s rights in the world.”

The Taliban has “sought not only to erase women from public life, but to extinguish our basic humanity,” Akbar said. “There is one term that appropriat­ely describes the situation of Afghan woman today: gender apartheid.”

Women gathered in Islamabad and other major cities in Pakistan to march amid tight security. Organizers said the demonstrat­ions were aimed at seeking rights guaranteed by the constituti­on. Some conservati­ve groups last year threatened to stop similar marches by force.

In Japan, women’s rights activists held a small rally to renew their demand for the government to allow married couples to keep using different surnames. Under the 1898 civil code, a couple must adopt “the surname of the husband or wife” at the time of marriage. Surveys show majority support for both men and women keeping their own names.

In the Philippine­s, hundreds of protesters from various women’s groups rallied in Manila for higher wages and decent jobs.

“We are seeing the widest gender pay gap,” protest leader Joms Salvador said. “We are seeing an unpreceden­ted increase in the number of women workers who are in informal work without any protection.”

The first female leader of Tanzania, President Samia Suluhu Hassan, said during an Internatio­nal Women’s Day rally organized by an opposition party that she has brought a new level of political tolerance to the East African nation.

Hassan has been accused of continuing her predecesso­r John Magufuli’s antidemocr­atic policies, but in January she lifted a six-year ban on opposition rallies in January.

“The opposition is lucky that it is a woman president in charge because if a misunderst­anding occurs, I will stand for peace and make the men settle their egos,” the president said.

In Turkey, women converged on a central Istanbul neighborho­od to try to demonstrat­e for their rights and protest the staggering toll of the deadly quake that hit Turkey and Syria a month ago.

Thousands braved an official ban on the march and were met by police who fired tear gas and detained several people. Similar incidents marred previous years’ efforts to hold the march.

Groups held banners saying “we are angry, we are in mourning,” a reference to the more than 46,100 people in Turkey who died in unsafe buildings and the hundreds of thousands left homeless in the Feb. 6 quake.

In Europe, hundreds of ethnic Albanian women in Kosovo’s capital protesting domestic violence threw black-and-red smoke bombs at the police headquarte­rs. The protesters, who rallied under the slogan “We march, do not celebrate,” accused police, the prosecutor’s office and the courts of gender discrimina­tion.

In Russia, where Internatio­nal Women’s Day is a national holiday, President Vladimir Putin presented state awards to several women during a Kremlin ceremony. He singled out a military paramedic and a journalist for fulfilling their duties during the war in Ukraine, which the Kremlin insists on calling “a special military operation.”

In Spain, hundreds of thousands of women — with the total expected to top 1 million, as in previous years — attended evening demonstrat­ions in Madrid, Barcelona and other cities. Big rallies were also organized in many cities around the world although some countries held only minor events.

Although Spain has for years produced one of the world’s biggest turnouts on March 8, this year’s marches are marked by a division within its left-wing government over a sexual liberty law that has inadverten­tly led to the reduction of sentences for hundreds of sexual offenders.

Spain’s feminists are also split over a new transgende­r rights law that took effect last week and allows anyone 16 and older to change their gender on official documents without medical certificat­ion. At a public Women’s Day event, a group of young women interrupte­d Equality Minister Irene Montero to argue with her about the law, which some contend threatens to erase or displace women.

Elsewhere in Europe, tens of thousands of people marched in Paris and other French cities, brandishin­g posters with the messages “Equal Pay, Now” and “Solidarity with the world’s women.” The rallies focused on protesting proposed changes to the pension system, which women’s group say are unfair to working mothers.

The protest came hours after President Emmanuel Macron’s government presented a new gender equity plan, which would prohibit companies that do not publish a gender equality index or have a poor rating from getting public contracts. Women’s salaries in France are on average 15.8% below men’s.

In Ireland, the government announced that it will hold a referendum in November to enshrine gender equality and remove discrimina­tory language in the constituti­on.

The Irish Constituti­on, which was drawn up in 1937, currently states that the state shall endeavor to “ensure that mothers shall not be obliged by economic necessity to engage in labor to the neglect of their duties in the home.”

Brazilian President Luiz Inácio Lula da Silva announced measures to promote and protect women after years of setbacks partially fueled by the rise of farright forces under predecesso­r Jair Bolsonaro.

Lula presented a bill that would guarantee equal pay for women and men who perform the same jobs and committed $73 million to build domestic violence shelters.

Women and girls in Afghanista­n are facing ‘the worst crisis for women’s rights in the world.’

— Zubaida Akbar, Afghan women’s rights

campaigner

 ?? Ebrahim Noroozi Associated Press ?? AFGHAN girls help brides get ready for a mass wedding ceremony in Kabul on Internatio­nal Women’s Day. Taliban-ruled Afghanista­n has become the world’s most repressive country for women and girls, the U.N. says.
Ebrahim Noroozi Associated Press AFGHAN girls help brides get ready for a mass wedding ceremony in Kabul on Internatio­nal Women’s Day. Taliban-ruled Afghanista­n has become the world’s most repressive country for women and girls, the U.N. says.
 ?? Mehmet Kacmaz Getty Images ?? DEMONSTRAT­ORS brave Turkish authoritie­s’ ban on a march in Istanbul to rally for women’s rights and protest the staggering toll of a deadly earthquake.
Mehmet Kacmaz Getty Images DEMONSTRAT­ORS brave Turkish authoritie­s’ ban on a march in Istanbul to rally for women’s rights and protest the staggering toll of a deadly earthquake.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States