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Canada best G20 country to be a woman, India worst

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Canada best G20 country to be a woman, India worst

LONDON: Policies that promote gender equality, safeguards against violence and exploitation and access to healthcare make Canada the best place to be a woman among the world’s biggest economies, a global poll of experts showed on Wednesday.

On the flip side, infanticide, child marriage and slavery make India the worst, the same poll concluded.

Germany, Britain, Australia and France rounded out the top five countries out of the Group of 20 in a perceptions poll of 370 gender specialists conducted by TrustLaw, a legal news service run by the Thomson Reuters Foundation.

The United States came in sixth but polarised opinion due to concerns about reproductive rights and affordable healthcare.

At the other end of the scale, Saudi Arabia – where women are well educated but are banned from driving and only won the right to vote in 2011 – polled second-worst after India, followed Indonesia, South Africa and Mexico.


“India is incredibly poor, Saudi Arabia is very rich. But there is a commonality and that is that unless you have some special access to privilege, you have a very different future, depending on whether you have an extra X chromosome, or a Y chromosome,” said Nicholas Kristof, journalist and co-author of “Half the Sky: Turning Oppression into Opportunity for Women Worldwide“, commenting on the poll results.

The poll, released ahead of a summit of G20 heads of state to be held in Mexico June 18-19, showed the reality for many women in many countries remains grim despite the introduction of laws and treaties on women’s rights, experts said.

“In India, women and girls continue to be sold as chattels, married off as young as 10, burned alive as a result of dowry-related disputes and young girls exploited and abused as domestic slave labor,” said Gulshun Rehman, health program development adviser at Save the UK, who was one of those polled.

“This is despite a ground breakingly progressive Domestic Violence Act enacted in 2005 outlawing all forms of violence against women and girls.”


TrustLaw asked aid professionals, academics, health workers, policymakers, journalists and development specialists with expertise in gender issues to rank the 19 countries of the G20 in terms of the overall best and worst to be a woman.

They also ranked countries in six categories: quality of health, freedom from violence, participation in politics, work place opportunities, access to resources such as education and property rights and freedom from trafficking and slavery.


Respondents came from 63 countries on five continents and included experts from United Nations Women, the International Rescue Committee, Plan International, Amnesty USA and Oxfam International, as well as prominent academic institutions and campaigning organizations. Representatives of faith-based organisations were also surveyed.

The EU, which is a member of the G20 as an economic grouping along with several of its constituent countries, was not included in the survey.

Canada was perceived to be getting most things right in protecting women’s well being and basic freedoms.


“While we have much more to do, women have access to healthcare, we place a premium on education, which is the first step toward economic independence and we have laws that protect girls and women and don’t allow for child marriage,” said Farah Mohamed, president and CEO of the Canada-based G(irls) 20 Summit, which organised a youth gathering that took place in Mexico in May, ahead of the G20 leaders’ meeting.

Experts were divided on the situation in the United States.

Civil rights and domestic violence laws, access to education, workplace opportunities and freedom of movement and speech were positive. But access to contraception and abortion were being curtailed and women suffered disproportionately from a lack of access to affordable healthcare, some experts said.

“Many of the gains of the last 100 years are under attack and the most overt and vicious attack is on reproductive rights,” said Marsha Freeman, director of International Women’s Rights Action Watch.

Barriers to development

It is more vital than ever to protect women’s freedoms at a time of political upheaval in several parts of the world, some experts said.

“Times of political transition, we’ve learned the hard way, can also be times of fragility, and when rights for women and girls can be rolled back instead of advanced,” said Minky Worden, director of global initiatives at Human Rights Watch.

Women’s rights are particularly under attack in G20 host country Mexico, which ranked 15th in the survey. Mexico has a culture of male chauvinism, high rates of physical and sexual violence and pockets of poverty where healthcare and other services are no better than in some of the most marginalised communities of Africa, experts said.

Women are also victims of drug-related crime. Some 300 women were killed in 2011 in the violent border town of Ciudad Juarez with almost total impunity, said Amnesty USA.

“The violence affects men and women but often women disproportionately,” added Worden. “Mexico is a place where law enforcement remains a challenge, and the government has an obligation to protect women, but often fails in that obligation, as it does to protect men.”

Putting women’s rights on the global agenda is the key to progress and to effective development, said Kristof. Countries that restrict women’s rights and freedoms or fail to protect them from injustices will suffer long-term, socially and economically, he added.

While the poll was based on perceptions and not statistics, UN data supports the experts’ views.

The Gender Inequality Index (GII), which looks at reproductive health, the labour market and empowerment of women through education and politics, named the same three countries as the worst places for women, although Saudi Arabia ranked the absolute worst in the GII, followed by India.

The GII, however, does not include gender-based violence or other elements such as the fact that many women carry additional burdens of care-giving and housekeeping.

When it came to what country was best, the expert perception did not match UN data. The GII ranked Germany, France and South Korea as the top three countries, in that order. Canada came seventh and the United States was in tenth place.

Activists were not surprised by the experts’ favourable view of Canada, however.

“Having an understanding of Canadian culture and tracking the work they’re doing around violence against women and gender equality, I believe that Canada really has been emerging as a model for what most countries should aspire to for a long time,” said Jimmie Briggs, journalist, author and founder of the Man Up Campaign that works to engage youth to stop violence against women and girls.


How they rank

1. Canada
canada-flag-14.gif


2. Germany

3. Britain

4. Australia

5. France

6. United States

7. Japan

8. Italy

9. Argentina

10. South Korea

11. Brazil

12. Turkey

13. Russia

14. China

15. Mexico

16. South Africa

17. Indonesia

18. Saudi Arabia

19. India


Very proud of Canada.
 
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wooo i'm surprised even a firm attitude Saudi Arabia is ahead of India.
 
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“In India, women and girls continue to be sold as chattels, married off as young as 10, burned alive as a result of dowry-related disputes and young girls exploited and abused as domestic slave labor,” said Gulshun Rehman, health program development adviser at Save the UK, who was one of those polled.

Says the Muslim. :lol:

How come UK is ranked third. According to the same author,

in the UK the
practice of intermarriage between first cousins in the Pakistani Muslim community
and the practice of FGM among settled immigrant Somali communities and thier
implications for health policy intervention have been well known for decades.

http://www.handicap-international.f..._Genre/mainstreaming_gender_in_disability.pdf
 
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why are everyone interested only about the worst in india? :hitwall:

we need to learn from china. start covering things up, and start showing our improvements more

India’s Female Peacekeepers Inspire Liberian Girls

According to Jickson Sargeor, the principal of Victory Chapel School, the Indian peacekeeping contingent provides the children with medication, lessons on using computers and Indian dance and self defense. In addition, the principal believes the Indian women have brought a much more important message to the children.

“It has made the girls to believe that they are not just people to sit at home, they are people to get out there,” he says.


“The Indian people have come and taught us that we women too are necessary to do the work they are doing,” she says. “We believed that not only men do these [kinds of] work but women too are capable of doing it.”

“It makes the boys to feel that women are also part of society. It also makes boys think women can do what men do,” says Principal Sargeor.
 
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Can any women asnwer pls, would you rather be an Indian woman or Saudi?

I have no illusions about the state of all powerless in India, women, children, poor, handicapped etc etc, its rooted in lack of governance, education and money.

However millions of women are extremely successful in India, are legally equal to a man, are industry leaders too. Maybe Saudi is a better place for home confined conservative women because they surely have better infra.

http://www.defence.pk/forums/general-images-multimedia/50924-women-business-leaders-india.html
 
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Can any women asnwer pls, would you rather be an Indian woman or Saudi?

Mate all our nations have shameful records when it comes to the treatment of women - no denying it. Historically women have been treated like 2nd class citizens by a large proportion of men -be it India Pakistan and particularly Saudi. One really has to educate the mindset of people as this is carried on from generation to generation. I hear stories of families praying for boys and not girls -sad but true as both are a gift that should be blessed...
 
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WoW we are not last. At least that is something. Sure we still have a long long long way to go but at least it is better to be a Saudi woman than an Indian woman.

As a Woman's rights activist here I must say that sure from outer perspective it is fvcked up but in reality it just needs a few tweaks here and there and we are in no rush because rushing change is a bad thing as history have told us.

Conservative clerics right now are extremely pissed at the advances we made according to women's rights and are calling that the current government has lost legitimacy because of it so it is better to wait for like a year or two till people get used to it and then strike with another wave again.
 
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WoW we are not last. At least that is something. Sure we still have a long long long way to go but at least it is better to be a Saudi woman than an Indian woman.

As a Woman's rights activist here I must say that sure from outer perspective it is fvcked up but in reality it just needs a few tweaks here and there and we are in no rush because rushing change is a bad thing as history have told us.

Conservative clerics right now are extremely pissed at the advances we made according to women's rights and are calling that the current government has lost legitimacy because of it so it is better to wait for like a year or two till people get used to it and then strike with another wave again.

Can Saudi lady's now walk around in the public, with a t-shirt etc on?
 
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