Showing posts with label Gender inequality. Show all posts
Showing posts with label Gender inequality. Show all posts

Tuesday, June 19, 2012

Women slow to climb Cambodia's market

Hem Sothy, a 48-year-old shop owner, speaks to the Post yesterday in Phnom Penh. Photograph: Heng Chivoan/Phnom Penh Post

Tuesday, 19 June 2012
Don Weinland
The Phnom Penh Post

Women's economic roles in Cambodia have made slower progress than in many other countries in the Asia-Pacific region, World Bank economists said yesterday.

The region as a whole has seen tremendous gains in the way of gender equality during the past 20 years, but increasing wages and education for women should be a policy priority for Cambodia, according to the economists and a World Bank report issued yesterday.

The report identified gender equality as a contributor to higher productivity and income growth.

It also pointed to foreign direct investment into garment manufacturing as a driver for women’s employment, although the stability of that work was susceptible to external shock should demand for Cambodia’s largest gross domestic product generator decline.

Cambodian women earn US$0.75 to every dollar their male counterparts make, World Bank economist and lead author of the report Andrew Mason said yesterday during a web conference from Bangkok.

Cambodia: A woman is only 3/4 of a human being?



Less Power for Cambodian Women, Report Says

Monday, 18 June 2012
Kong Sothanarith, VOA Khmer
"In Cambodia, women earn $0.75 to every dollar a man earns."
Cambodian women have fewer opportunities than men, and less access to economic and political positions of power, a World Bank report says.

Women in Cambodia and other countries in East Asia and the Pacific do have more economic access and business ownership than in some Western countries, but they have less power in family, politics and civil society, the report says. Women also face a greater risk of human trafficking in the region, according to the report.

In Cambodia, women earn $0.75 to every dollar a man earns, said Andrew Mason, a co-author of the report, “Entitling Toward Gender Equality in East Asia and the Pacific.”

Cambodian women earn $0.75 a day ... with the exception of one who earns millions a day

ស្ត្រីខ្មែ​ររកចំណូលបា​ន ៧៥សេនដុល្លា​រក្នុងមួយថ្ងៃ ... 
 ខណៈដែល​ជំទាវស្រីធុំ រកប្រាក់រាប់លាន ​ដុល្លារ​ ចួលក្នុង​មួយថ្ងៃ​ ចាយ តចៅ

ស្ត្រី​កម្ពុជា​រកចំណូលបាន ៧៥​សេន​ដុល្លារ ខណៈដែល​បុរស​រកចំណូលបាន ១​ដុល្លារ​ក្នុង​មួយថ្ងៃ​

ថ្ងៃទី 18 មិថុនា 2012
ដោយ: រតនា
Cambodia Express News

ភ្នំពេញ: ​លោក អេ​ន​ឌ្រូ​វ ម៉េ​សុន អ្នកដឹកនាំ​សរសេរ​របាយការណ៍ នៃ​ធនាគារពិភពលោក បាន​និយាយថា ដូច​ខ្ញុំ​បានធ្វើ​បទ​បង្ហាញថា ប្រទេសមួយ​ចំនួន​ក្នុង​តំបន់ (​អាស៊ី​) នៅតែ​ប្រឈម​នឹង​បញ្ហា​យែ​ន​ឌ័​រ និង​ការអប់រំ​ជា​មូលដ្ឋាន ហើយ​ប្រទេស​កម្ពុជា គឺជា​ប្រទេសមួយ​ក្នុងចំណោម​នោះ​។ លោក​បានលើកឡើង​បែបនេះ នៅក្នុង​សន្និសីទកាសែត​វីដេអូ​ខ​ន​ហ្វឺ​រឹន​ពី​ទីក្រុង​បាងកក ប្រទេស​ថៃ ជាមួយ​ធនាគារពិភពលោក​ប្រចាំ​នៅ​កម្ពុជា កាលពី​វេលា​ម៉ោង ១១ ដល់​ម៉ោង ១២ ថ្ងៃត្រង់ នា​ថ្ងៃទី​១៨ ខែមិថុនា ឆ្នាំ​២០១២​។​

​លោក អេ​ន​ឌ្រូ​វ ម៉េ​សុន (Andrew Mason) បាន​លើក​ឧទាហរណ៍​នៅក្នុង​កម្រិត​មធ្យមសិក្សា យើង​បាន​ឃើញថា មានតែ​យុវនារី​ចំនួន ៨៥ ភាគរយ​ប៉ុណ្ណោះ បាន​ចូលរៀន បើ​ធៀប​នឹង​ចំនួន​យុវជន ដូច្នេះ​នៅមាន​គម្លាត​នៃ​ការអប់រំ​ដែល​ត្រូវបំពេញ​។

Friday, May 07, 2010

Concern Grows Over Women’s Health, Equality

A Cambodian woman kisses her baby while walking through the slum village in Phnom Penh.(Photo: AP)

Chun Sakada, VOA Khmer

Phnom Penh Thursday, 06 May 2010

"Cambodian women still face problems of domestic violence, rape and trafficking."
Lawmakers and health officials from the UN are meeting Friday over the country’s progress on maternal mortality and gender equality, as concern grows that Cambodia is failing to meet its development goals and is in some cases losing ground.

“The maternal mortality rate is still at a high level, and it hasn’t fallen like the Cambodian government wants,” Ping Chutema, director of the Reproductive Health Association of Cambodia, told VOA Khmer on Thursday. “It is a very serious problem.”

Cambodia has so-called millennium development goals, which include lowering the rates of mothers who die in childbirth and improving gender equality, among others.

But Ping Chutema said for maternal mortality, the country is going in the wrong direction.

“In 2000, 437 women died in childbirth among 100,000; 472 died in 2005,” she said. “Our maternal mortality is still high, and our gender equality and empowerment of women is not yet equal. We have not reached the millennium development goals.”

Cambodian women still face problems of domestic violence, rape and trafficking, said Say Saravathany, director of the Cambodian Women’s Crisis Center, which took in more than 1,400 women in 2009.

“It affects a woman’s health in both body and feeling,” she said. “The majority of women suffer from domestic violence. They have no energy or heart to join in social development, and they are not brave enough to become leaders.”

And while the government does have an official policy to promote the rights and health of women, “it has not worked to implement it,” Ros Sopheap, director of Gender and Development for Cambodia, said. “Women have the right to participate in decision-making at sub-national and national levels, but there is not gender equity.”

“If we compare gender equality and empowerment of women over the past 10 years, now there are steps forward,” she said. “But a step forward is still not reaching the level of equality.”

Mu Sochua, a lawmaker for the opposition Sam Rainsy Party and former minister of women’s affairs, said there is time to reach the development goals, but the government needs to boost the national budget and prioritize education and health.

“Women’s decision-making in the community, or at sub-national and national levels is still very limited,” she said. “The millennium development goals remain far from the wishes of our Cambodians.”

Cheam Yiep, a lawmaker for the ruling Cambodian People’s Party, said Friday’s discussions will provide various theories and ideas on how the government can fulfill its development goals.

Monday, December 21, 2009

Media Still Struggling to Break Gender Barriers

By Lynette Lee Corporal

PHNOM PENH, Dec 21 (IPS) - Cambodia's media organisations are a 'battleground' for old ways and new approaches when it comes to gender.

While more media entities are recognising the role women play in and outside newsrooms, prevailing mindsets and traditions, as well as the lack of training and experience tend to slow down progress in gender sensitivity and equality.

Although the number of media organisations have clearly increased since 1993, after the elections overseen by the United Nations Transitional Authority in Cambodia that ended decades of conflict, many Cambodians still see journalism as a 'man's world'. The Cambodian media are "still a very male-dominated industry," says Cambodia's English-language daily 'The Phnom Penh Post' editor-in-chief Seth Meixner.

As of October 2009, Cambodia has 341 newspapers, 119 magazines, 22 radio stations and seven television outfits.

Meixner adds that whatever gender sensitivity-related issues they put out in the paper will certainly reach audiences, particularly its Khmer-language edition's readers. "Will they change opinions? Maybe on a small scale. I don't think it's going to shift centuries of social thinking," he adds.

French-Khmer daily ‘Cambodge Soir’ journalist Ung Chansophea welcomes seeing more women taking communications and journalism courses in college. "I think more women are joining the media industry and are even sometimes better at it than men. There's room for improvement, though. Still, the society views the industry as a job for males and many women still agree to this thinking," she adds.

Indeed, traditional thinking still sees women as mainly homebound. The pressure usually comes from the parents themselves who discourage their daughters from pursuing a career in journalism.

"Parents don't like their daughters to go away from home and communicate with all kinds of people because they think it's not good and even dangerous," says Tive Sarayeth, executive director of the Women's Media Centre of Cambodia, a non-government organisation that was formed in 1995 to increase women's participation in the media.

Meixner adds that tradition is so ingrained in the Cambodian society's psyche that he once heard a ministerial official say that she did not think "women are ready" to be involved in politics and that "they belong in the home."

He says, "In my previous work for another newspaper, a female colleague started out as a very good journalist, but three months afterwards, she quit (due to parental pressure)." Apart from the ‘dangers’ posed by the job, Meixner recalled his female colleague as saying that "they (parents) want me to marry this guy, I'm going to have kids and I can’t work after that."

"I do think this still exists as an issue, but at the same time, kind of parallel to that, you do have a generation of young women reporters who, I think, are much more independent-minded than perhaps their predecessors," he says.

In the ‘Phnom Penh Post’, Meixner says there are an increasing number of women applicants who are still in their third or fourth year communications course but eager to get writing experience. "There are more women applicants in general. A lot of those kids are already working for us and quite a few of them are women," he says.

Then there is a general perception even among women journalists that they can never be as good as their male counterparts. "The women themselves think that being journalists is a man's job, not a woman's. She also fears she is incapable of doing her job well because it might just be too much for her and that she might neglect her family in the process," explains Tive.

Thus, at least now, women journalists end up being assigned more to cover the so-called 'lighter news', including society, lifestyle, health, and education, to name a few.

"People still think that women journalists should write about something else other than 'more serious stuff'. When we try to get information from higher-ups, they look at us as like, 'Oh, that girl can't write that kind of story'," Ung adds.

Ung's goal is to learn how to interact with such news sources and "to feel free" doing so. "I want to show them that there are enough intelligent women journalists out there and that we can do the story as well as our male counterparts," she says.

Meixner agrees, saying "they (male reporters) just think, ‘women can’t cover that, she's just a girl and she can't actually do that."

As for women journalists getting more leverage when interviewing sources, he says it really depends on the journalists and how enlightened the sources are.

"I've seen sources refuse to speak to a journalist because she was a woman. Female journalists also get very nervous not being able to deal with an interviewee, and sometimes male interviewees flirt with female journalists," he says, adding that it is also the same with some male journalists who completely clam up in front of a police official or a government official.

Editors of the 'Post' and 'Cambodge Soir' actively try to encourage their women reporters to cover not just feature pieces but also political and social issues.

The in-house training of journalists in their respective media outfits is almost non-existent, Tive says. She also agrees that it is also difficult to gather these journalists to "sit and listen" to a one-day workshop "because they need to cover (the news)".

What she finds very difficult, however, is to invite editors-in-chief to attend skills and gender sensitivity training sessions. "Even if we try to educate journalists to be gender sensitive, if their editors don't have that kind of gender perspective, it's useless," she says.

Tive says she sees a difference in the way men and women write. Women tend to go deeper and try to understand the reasons why, say, a sex worker got into her 'profession'. In contrast, male journalists may tend to be more matter-of-fact, or worse, launch into a blame game. "If men write, he blames the woman, rather than go into the deeper aspects of an issue," she says.

"When I write about women's issues, I want to dig deeper into why things are that way and I use more sensitive words to describe the situation. I think for men, on the other hand, when they write about women's issues, they write just for information. I'm not generalising but normally, it's like that here," says Ung.

On issues like health and gender parity, Meixner notes that women are generally better informed and not as dismissive of such matters. "But it's weird... for, say, trafficking of women stories, there is not much sensitivity from the male and female reporters, especially when the women involved are non-Cambodians," he says.

Both the 'Post' and 'Cambodge Soir' staff say the publications do follow gender-sensitive language, although, admittedly, not on a consistent basis. For instance, both now try to use consistently the phrase 'beer promotion girls' rather than 'beer girls', a term often equated with girls engaged in sex work.

Of late, Tive says, there has been an increase in reports on sexual assault on women and newspapers, and that magazines -- notorious for graphic images and screaming headlines -- are presenting these on their front pages.

But many of these newspapers now also follow ethical considerations and try to present balanced views. "While magazines continue to show graphic images of dead bodies and the like, newspapers have become more sensitive," says Tive.

Likewise, she says, newspapers have stopped featuring pornographic images. Local magazines, however, are still notorious for their sensational and graphic images. Blood and gore have big readership.

"The Cambodian media are underdeveloped in terms of a sense of what's acceptable and what's not. We're talking about a very basic press corps here. There's a lack of education and lack of media experience," says Meixner.

Of this penchant for violent images, Ung explains: "I think the violent culture in Cambodia is still there, a result of the Khmer regime. Papers publish them because there are still many people who want to see these things."

For Tive, writing about women as 'victims' of a violent crime, for instance, is a double-edged sword. "Portraying women as victims reinforces the stereotype that women are weak, decorations and sex objects. But on the other hand, it is also a good way of increasing awareness about women's issues," she says.

Tive says it is important to think of different issues that touch on gender issues, such as health and economic issues that affect women.

"Through our radio programme, we always emphasise the impacts of a social issue to women," explains Tive. "So a man who smokes tobacco, for instance, not only affects a woman's health but also the family's livelihood. The landmine problem also impacts on the woman if the husband or the son becomes disabled."

Tuesday, March 10, 2009

Cultural standards prevent progress on women's issues

Tuesday, 10 March 2009
Written by Tom Hunter
The Phnom Penh Post


Despite the celebration of International Women's Day Sunday, double standards favouring men are still the norm in Cambodia, say advocates.

THE Khmer proverb that says "men are like gold and women are like cloth" is often used by Cambodian human rights advocates to demonstrate how cultural norms often collide with the rights of the individual.

The proverb, said Luke Bearup, the Children in Crisis regional coordinator for World Vision Asia Pacific, aptly describes the difficulties in advocating equality in the Kingdom.

"It is globally accepted that women face a one-in-three chance of domestic violence within their lifetime," Bearup said Sunday.

International Women's Day is historically an opportunity to reflect on gender issues in an attempt to advance equality and to promote the advancement of women worldwide.

But sexual inequality is so ingrained in Cambodian culture that most women are not aware of what their rights are, said Hung Nary, project manager at Gender and Development Cambodia.

Hung Nary, who spoke at a gathering of more than 500 people in Kampong Chhnang province over the weekend in an attempt to educate women about their rights, said residents were eager to pose questions to the district governor.

"The women were keen to talk about land titles, birth certificates and marriage certificates," she said.

"Men are not including women on land titles, or attaining birth and marriage certificates ... so when the man finds another wife, the women are left with nothing."

Hung Nary said women in the province had also urged authorities to take domestic violence more seriously, claiming that what she termed "police education" was only exacerbating the problem.

According to the villagers, reporting violence only inflamed men's tempers and ensured a continuing pattern of abuse.

Through his work on gender equality and sexual relationships, independent researcher Tong Soprach says the legal disparities that exist between the sexes remain the biggest obstacle to gender equality.

"Prostitutes are rounded up by police and made to pay a bribe," he said. "Why are the men not punished by the law?"
Double standards

In 2003, GAD/C surveyed 580 youths aged between 13 and 28 from 24 communes in Phnom Penh. When respondents were asked of their feelings on gang rape, or bauk, only 13 percent of those surveyed accepted that forceful sexual relations with a prostitute was in fact rape.

In a similar study conducted by Tong Soprach in January 2009, some 22.7 percent of respondents understood that bauk was rape while almost a third of respondents did not.

Alarmingly, the study also found that 10.8 percent of males aged 15 to 24 and not in a relationship had performed bauk with a sex worker in the three months prior to the survey.

Bearup said that in Cambodia, as in many countries, cultural double standards continued to favour men.

"Norms that condone men's right to engage in pre- and post-marital sexual experiences, but stigmatise women who are sexually active, ultimately foster a sociocultural environment that tolerates violence against women," he said.