I found this story at the BBC web sight .It is about Libyan women and their climb to equality in the work field .I found it accurate in covering the advances and disadvantages women in Libya face when working.
Tuesday, 29 April 2008 14:08 UK
Women's lib takes off in Libya
By Rana Jawad
BBC News, Tripoli
Kulthum Bouseyfi graduated as one of Libya's first female pilots and three years on she is still one of the country's few.
Kulthum Bouseyfi
The sky is the limit for Kulthum Bouseyfi
"I remember one time when I announced, 'This is Captain Kulthum Bouseyfi', some elderly men panicked," she says, recalling some funny moments working for state-run Afriqiyah Airways.
"They started shouting, 'How is that possible? It's a woman!
"Then the cabin crew took some of them to the cockpit and reassured them that the system could be learned by anyone."
The aviation industry in Libya is arguably one of the country's most male-dominated sectors.
But Ms Bouseyfi's story is a sign that things are changing in what was once a man's world.
"I thought that no-one would accept women working in such a field," she says.
"But I see people's respect when they find out I am a pilot."
Ms Bouseyfi's dream is to establish her own commercial aviation company.
The times they are a changing
The emancipation of women in Libya has come a long way in the last few decades.
They now make up more than 22% of the workforce, compared to just 6% in the 1970s.
Libyan law provides free and equal participation for women in all social, political and economic activities.
Famous women have included ministers and judges, as well as doctors and lawyers.
As the country shifts towards privatisation, female entrepreneurship is bearing fruit from IT companies to accounting firms.
Ibtissam Ben-Amer owns a franchise of the French chocolatier, Jeff de Bruges, in Tripoli, but her experience has been bitter-sweet.
"It was not easy," she says. "I started in business 15 years ago when there was an embargo on Libya, so that was a really difficult time."
Ibtissam Ben-Amer's chocolate shop
Ibtissam Ben-Amer wants to open more chocolate shops
"Right now things are getting better and the Libyan market is opening up very fast."
She is looking to branch out with her chocolate shop in other parts of Libya.
But in North Africa generally, fathers, husbands and brothers still have a huge say in women's choices, so women's lib is an uphill struggle.
Haifa El Geblawi, who works for a foreign oil and gas company in Libya, says she has the support of her family to pursue her career but other women are not so lucky.
"Some men prefer their wives to work in schools - that way they get to come home earlier," Ms El Geblawi says.
"The husband still depends on her to take care of the children, the housework and cooking. So even if she works, she still has to do all of that as well."
Rough terrain
In private, young Libyan women, who are considered "too liberal", will complain of being sidelined or even excluded from business trips abroad because their male bosses want to pre-empt any gossip.
Our society is very conservative and patriarchal
Libyan business woman
A young Libyan business woman shared her experience on condition of anonymity.
She works in a government investment firm while most of her peers work in the private sector.
It is in the civil service, she says, that she comes up against many barriers.
"Our society is very conservative and patriarchal," she says.
"It is unusual for a woman to live on her own and work in the public sector. I struggle all the time to overturn the stereotype of women working only as secretaries.
"As a result, my ability to do my job is often hindered and made difficult. I deal with bureaucratic and chauvinistic obstacles every day."
The Libyan leader, Muammar Gaddafi, has been seen as an emancipator of Libyan women.
He has challenged social taboos and even appointed female bodyguards.
Libya's military academy for women also had foreigners training in it during the 1990s, including recruits from Sudan, Lebanon and the Palestinian territories.
But despite the progress, Libyan women in the security field are in the minority as society's perceptions of more traditional roles for women prevail.
And the abiding image in Libya is still of women who rarely mix with men in public and still cover themselves up with a veil.
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7 comments:
www.rhrealitycheck.org/blog/2008/
04/29/telling-an-awful-story-to-
the-world
This is a very good website which links you to different blogs regarding women issues.
This time they have the story of women's rape in Congo.
Sorry the link you sent no longer has this post . Thanks for the thought .
http://www.rhrealitycheck.org/blog/
2008/04/29/
telling-an-awful-story-to-the-
world
The Link works, try it, make sure you copy all of it
Had to cut and paste but read the story .
RAPE ... The ultimate
(ul·ti·mate [últimət]
adjective
1. final: coming or attained at the end of a series of stages, and often constituting the culmination of something......
Microsoft® Encarta® 2007. © 1993-2006 Microsoft Corporation. All rights reserved.)
crime. Shame , pain , humiliation , hate , rage , all rained upon victims made to feel these things . A special hell awaits the perpetrator .
It is still difficult for women to forge ahead with their careers in Libya, I agree. But I wouldn't be so quick to condemn the 'patriarchial' side of our society. Not all areas have been covered in this article. As part of the first group of Libyan women to work in a major Tripoli hotel through the mid-eighties/mid-nineties, at the Front Office and in Housekeeping, I found that the worst discriminators against my colleagues and I were members of our own sex, sad to say. They regarded us with contempt because of our jobs.
I can only imagine the prejudice you face in the Hotel business .Way back when I worked in the States in a 5 star hotel, in a very classy area, and met with many of the same problems myself .
I have to say that Libyan women , and I don't mean this in a derogatory way as some may want to make it seem , but they do make other womens lives a living hell if they can get away with it if it is something they perceive as a threat to their way of life in one way or another . Such as you , a Libyan woman in a Hotel , OMG !!! That must mean you are "available " in their eyes to their husbands, fathers , brothers , ect .They are so insecure in their position in society , that they will see anyone as a threat to their little world . So sorry you had to experience this just because you worked !
Libya is a Great country with a great people and great women. I have been there and I know. USA Colorado
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