Just nu: i Linköping, Sverige.

torsdag 8 mars 2012

Internationella kvinnodagen

Under de sex månader jag har bott här i Frankrike har jag tänkt en del på jämställdhet och hur stor skillnad det är mellan Frankrike och Sverige på den fronten. Såg på Facebook idag en artikel i SvD om lönegapet mellan kvinnor och män i Sverige. Om man räknar om deltid till heltid blir det tydligen 14,3 procent skillnad. I Frankrike är det snarare runt 20-25 procent skillnad efter vad jag hört. Enligt INSEE (Institute national de la statistique et des études économiques, som Sveriges Statistiska centralbyrån SCB) var det 20,9 procent skillnad 2008 och 20,1 procent 2009. Det märks också lite i allmänhet att det är större jämställdhetsskillnad här, eller så är det en känsla jag har. Jag tror att man som ung tjej blir bemött annorlunda än som ung kille, mer än hemma. Sådana grejer stör mig, och har bidragit till att jag inte ser det som särskilt lockande att arbeta senare i Frankrike. I så fall på ett internationellt företag kanske. Andra saker som mammaledighet existerar nästan inte här. Tror att de har tre veckor eller en månad...


Jag fick i alla fall ett mail från Amnesty idag på internationella kvinnodagen. Det handlade om att agera mot de brott mot kvinnliga mänskliga rättigheter som har pågått i många år i Jemen. Gå in här och skriv under detta brev:


His Excellency Mohammed Ahmed al-Mikhlafi
Minister of Legal Affairs
Ministry of Legal Affairs
P.O. Box 1192, Sana'a
Republic of Yemen
Email: legal@y.net.ye

Sweden, March 2012
Your Excellency,
I am writing to Your Excellency at this critical time of transition for Yemen to call on Your Excellency to seek an end to discrimination and violence against women in the country and, as a first step towards this, to announce the Yemeni Government’s intention to review discriminatory provisions in law in consultation with women’s rights groups.
Women have played a central role in the protests in Yemen and this was recognized when the Nobel Peace Prize was awarded to Tawakkol Karman, as one of three women to jointly receive the award in October. Women activists, however, have been harassed, arrested and in some cases beaten for their participation in protests. Some have also been threatened via their family, with male relatives told to assert control and curtail their activism. 
Women in Yemen face systemic discrimination and endemic violence, with devastating consequences for their lives. Their rights are routinely violated because Yemeni laws as well as tribal and customary practices treat them as second-class citizens. Women face discrimination in matters of marriage, divorce, inheritance, and child custody, and the state fails to take adequate measures to prevent, investigate and punish domestic violence.
I call on Your Excellency to do what is in Your Excellency's power to take effective measures to address discriminatory laws and practices, protect the right of women to equality with men and to be free from all forms of discrimination, and address the underlying social and cultural attitudes that discriminate against women. 
In particular, I am calling on the Yemeni authorities to:
- bring all laws, practices, policies and procedures into full conformity with international human rights law and standards;
- ensure that women have equality with men in law and practice, including under family law;
exercise due diligence by protecting women and girls against human rights abuses within the family, in particular forced marriages and physical and psychological abuse, and ensure that violence in the family is addressed and those responsible are held to account;
- repeal or reform laws on “immoral” behaviour to ensure that such laws conform to international standards and do not impact in a discriminatory way on women;
- ensure that law enforcement officials, public officials and members of the judiciary receive training in gender-sensitive approaches to violence and other violations of women’s rights, and that women who are subjected to violence are not re-victimized because of gender-insensitive law enforcement practices;
- take steps to recruit and train women police officers, prosecutors, interrogators and judges in sufficient numbers so that women officers are present whenever women are arrested and detained or interviewed by the police or members of the judiciary.
Furthermore, I understand that a minimum age of marriage law is currently still pending discussion in Parliament. In this regard, I call on Your Excellency to ensure that in all cases, forced marriages are prohibited. In the case of the marriage of a child under 18, the state must establish that the consent is meaningful. In order to establish that a child’s full and free consent is credible, it must be clear that the child is of an age that is consistent with her or his full comprehension of the consequences and obligations of marriage.  In all cases both parties to the marriage must be entering into it freely without any undue influence or coercion, including the threat or violence or financial incentive. No parent or guardian can substitute their understanding and consent for the child’s. For children who do marry before the age of 18, they should never be subjected to discrimination based on their marital status, so, for example, girls should not be forced to withdraw from school.
I thank Your Excellency in advance for Your Excellency's attention to this matter.
Yours respectfully,

KOM IGEN, KÄNN VIKTIGHETEN!!!

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