Monday, 29 July 2013

Useful links, analysis and literature on migrant issues and notably on women migrants available in Russian language on:
http://togetherlive.ru/?cat=14

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Полезные ссылки, исследования и анализы о современных миграционных процессах и о женщинах -мигрантах в России доступны на русском языке на сайте:
http://togetherlive.ru/?cat=14

в частности:

"Женщины-мигранты из стран СНГ в России" : http://togetherlive.ru/?p=395

"Трудовая миграция: тенденции, политика, статистика": http://togetherlive.ru/?p=392

"Гендерные подходы в формировании политики регулирования трудовой миграции в РФ: экспертная оценка": http://togetherlive.ru/?p=382

"Образ трудового мигранта из Центральной Азии в зеркале СМИ — 2012":
http://togetherlive.ru/?p=226

"Образование для всех и миграция" : http://togetherlive.ru/?p=220



 

Wednesday, 24 July 2013

ACWF President Emphasizes Importance of Women's Entrepreneurship

President of the All-China Women's Federation (ACWF) Shen Yueyue  assessed women's work in northern China's Tianjin Municipality from July 15- 17, 2013, during which she emphasized the importance of women's entrepreneurship.

Shen visited a women's hand-knitting development center in the Binhai New Area, which provides job opportunities to more than 5,000 local women. The center's sales revenue now reaches over one million yuan (US$ 162,900).

Shen also talked to a college graduate named Guo Chengcheng who started her own business at the center a year ago. Shen was glad to hear that Guo and her partners can each earn about 2,000 yuan (US$ 325.8) a month and said that she hoped they would inspire more graduates to follow their example.

Statistics show that more than 220,000 women in Tianjin are currently engaged in the hand-knitting industry which serves as a platform for the Tianjin Women's Federation to promote women's employment and entrepreneurship. Currently, their products are exported to over 30 countries, creating yearly sales revenue of about two billion yuan (US$ 325.8 million).

Shen also visited the Tianjin Women's Entrepreneurship center and a few vegetable greenhouses run by rural women. Many of the women have benefited from the favorable policies provided by the government and women's federations. In addition, micro-credit programs have also helped many of the women start their own businesses.

Shen talked to the women about the challenges they face and assured them that the women's federations will do all they can to help the women. She also pointed out that improving women's skills is the key to promoting women's development and both the government and the public should work together to encourage women's entrepreneurship.

Shen also met with Secretary of the Tianjin Municipal Committee of the Communist Party of China (CPC) Sun Chunlan during her visit. She spoke highly of the city's efforts to safeguard women's and children's rights and interests, saying that the Tianjin Municipal Party Committee and government have found the meeting point between serving the local women and public and giving full play to the advantages of the women's federations.

Tuesday, 23 July 2013

An Analysis on the Influence of Community Stock Cooperative System on Rural Women’s Rights for Collective Economic Income Distribution


The Rural Community Stock Cooperative System is adopted in economically advanced areas as a new system to clarify collective property rights. Since the system was implemented, it has gained a lot of attention in China. Compared to traditional collective ownership, the design of the Community Stock Cooperative System is to satisfy the interests of three parties: rural villagers, village organizations and local government. It improves resource distribution within communities, and moves them towards Pareto Optimality.
I. Advantages and Disadvantages of Community Stock Cooperative System in Protecting Rural Women’s Collective Property Rights
From the perspective of rural women, Community Stock Cooperative System is very beneficial. First, it changes the joint possession of collective property to several possessions, which has clarified women’s ownership. Second, it has embodies a modern corporate governance structure, which could effectively eliminate the kind of gender discrimination that is prevalent in the old collective income distribution system. Third, the new system distributes mainly monetary assets instead of more substantive assets, such as land. It directly allocates stock shares to individuals, and highlights individual rights. The stock cooperative system clearly gives stock rights to female individuals through a process of shareholder verification, public announcement, and stock share certificate issuance, to prevent any potential violations of women’s rights by household joint possession.
The Stock Cooperative System is innovative not only for recognizing farmers’ economic income rights by contracting land under collective ownership, but also for guaranteeing collective members’ right to share profits from the added value of non-agricultural land. The benefit of non-agricultural land is higher than agricultural land, and the rights to it are based only on identity, therefore, the recognition of villagers’ stock share qualification is stricter than that of household contracting rights.
The Community Stock Cooperative System is more advanced because it has clearer property rights than traditional collective economic organizations. But, the new system’s flaw still lies in it’s imperfect property rights clarification, and incomplete, inefficient governance structure. The new system still has features of joint possession, and its distribution is still based on collective membership, thus it is still possible for the collective to exclude women. The Community Stock Cooperative System strictly confines shares in the community boundary; if you want to have stock shares of this village, you must have collective membership in this village community. The system separates collective stock shares into "individual stock shares" in order to reflect that "everyone" has the right of membership under collective ownership. The system divides the profit sharing classes by different years of working, or farming experience, to comply with traditional quota of collective ownership. It regulates membership changes caused by population migration by adjusting the stock shares quota. This process of distribution and allocation in the new stock share system still maintains the basic structure and contents of collective ownership, which could prove to be problematic. As an expert pointed out, “Women’s land rights are violated because their collective membership is constantly challenged, therefore, individualization of rights becomes the optimal measure for protecting women’s rights, so as to realize the change from social identification to social contract”.
Quasi land ownership has also seen many changes. It was once obtained freely by membership, but now it is bought. In addition, the land obtained by the members was not transferable, but now it is, making the property rights of rural landowners gradually more complete. The new shareholding system changed from an old, closed, community form of system to a new, open, enterprise form of system. Although the current reform of stock cooperative system is not complete, the measures taken have improved it, and helped to get rid of the influence of an informal system of collective income distribution, which was more often than not discriminatory to women.
II. Violation of Women’s Rights in Rural Community Cooperative System Reform
Rural Community Stock Cooperative System is a completely new system with many new conditions and problems. Due to various reasons in the past and present, rural women’s rights are sometimes violated in the new Stock Reform System. In some parts of Jiangsu province, about 20% of women were not treated equally mainly in the four aspects below:
1. Some rural women did not get land in the second round of land contracting, thus they could not receive equal treatment when collective assets were quantified.
2. Illegal village rules have violated women’s rights. For example, some village rules permit only 25-50% of land acquisition compensation for married women. In a city in southern Jiangsu, the municipal government’s documents and the share cooperatives charter states “when married women migrate, their household registration is moved to their husbands’ village, but if they have not migrated within 5 years, they shall not get stock shares.” This kind of proclamation is against law.
3. Some rural women are forced to migrate when they marry urban husbands. Under the former household registration system, rural married women could not move their household registrations to the city, so they just leave the registrations with their parents in the countryside. The new household registration system has lowered the threshold, which enables farmers to gain urban registrations. As a result, some villages force women who have married urban men to migrate out of the village, then cancel their relevant economic rights and interests. However, things have changed over recent years. Some villages enjoy a very favorable collective welfare, as a result, there is no pressure on women to marry urban men, and even if they do, they would not migrate.
4. The long-existed “live with your husband” pattern still stops rural women and their children from fully enjoying shareholding interests from stock cooperative system reform.
III. The Impact of the Community Stock Cooperative System Reform on Rural Women’s Economic Rights
The reform system’s design and implementation has both advantages and disadvantages for rural women’s economic rights:
1. There are no clear rules identifying members of collective economic organizations, thus leaving the rights of married and divorced women unprotected. In economically advanced areas, a key issue in women’s land rights, especially stock rights, is how to distribute property to “married out women”. “Married out women” are those women who did not marry residents of their own villages, and have to leave their household registration, as well as their children’s, in their original villages.
“Married out women,” and children are usually excluded from the category of identified shareholders (villagers) during a stock reform. Because there is no theory or law concerning the identification of membership, household registration is used as the first step of identifying village membership. The next step is to ensure that the villager has fulfilled their obligations to the community, such as complying with the family planning policy. It is also important that the villager resides in, and has a contract to operate land in the community. Other informal elements influence membership as well, such as traditions, family influence, and the village authorities.
The system of Identity-based collective profits distribution, combined with the difficulty in identifying village membership, has allowed the collective will of the villagers to selectively exclude “married out women”. According to the survey of Professor Lu Ying from Sun Yat-sen University, 80.1% “married out women” have lost their stock dividends after married, while divorced women are also unprotected, because with their stock share cancelled, and household registration repelled, they are left with nothing.
2. Periodic adjustments of stock rights have encouraged people to move into the community, like new wives for example. A community periodically adjusts stock rights by retrieving stock rights from those who passed away or moved out, and reallocates them to the new community members. Such adjustments have protected the rights of the new population, but also brought many conflicts. First, as population increases, dividend per share drops and affects every shareholder. Second, as only villagers can get a stock share, people do not move out, and village population explodes, putting a heavy burden on collective economy. Third, complicated population flow has made it increasingly difficult to identify village (collective economic organization) membership, giving rise to more disputes. Since 2003, some villages have allowed no change in stock rights allocation.
3. Fixed stock rights allocation has varied influence on rights of the new villagers. A innovation in the Stock Cooperative system fixes down shareholders, and the total number of stock shares in order to prevent disputes over resource allocation. However, if a married woman and her children changed their household registration in recent years, before the stock rights distribution was fixed, they would not receive stock shares.
4. Clarifying women’s stock share ownership helps to get rid of the potential infringements, which existed under the system of household joint possession. In the past, the family unit distributed and managed the household land, and the land rights were subject to the joint possession of family members. Joint possession by family members meant that individual property rights were not clearly divided between husband and wife. When there was a divorce the woman’s claim to her land would often be overshadowed by that of her husband. “Family is a double-edged sword. It can both protect and jeopardize women’s land rights.”

Monday, 22 July 2013

Changing the Lives of Changsha's Women

This March, the Changsha Women's Federation in Changsha, capital city of central China's Hunan Province, received a special letter sent from the Hunan Province Women's Prison. The letter writer, an inmate surnamed Wang, wrote: "Thank you for showing concern for me and helping me rebuild my confidence and renew my hope in life."

A victim of domestic violence, Wang was sentenced to life imprisonment after she killed her husband because she could no longer tolerate his abuse. Driven to desperation in prison, she had become a problematic inmate.

When the staff of the Changsha Women's Federation got to know her story, they tried to help her rebuild her life by talking to her and re-connecting her with her family. Their efforts have made her feel cared for and hopeful towards the future. Recently, she received a commutation of sentence for good behavior.

This is just one example of how the city's women's federation has helped women fight domestic violence, get involved in politics, start their own businesses and improve their health and lives.

Innovative Efforts in Anti-domestic Violence
The Changsha Women's Federation has won a good nationwide reputation and recognition from the All-China Women's Federation (ACWF) for its outstanding and innovative efforts to fight domestic violence. In fact, many of those involved in anti-domestic violence work in China travel to Changsha specifically to learn more about its work experiences in the field.

Thanks to the federation’s efforts, a city-level government policy on the prevention of domestic violence and a local legal policy on anti-domestic violence were issued in Changsha. They are the first such policies to be issued in China.

In addition, the women's federation has also pushed forward publicity activities on anti-domestic violence in many communities and raised awareness of policies and measures protecting victims of domestic violence. It has also expanded the anti-domestic violence prosecution network.

The women's federation's efforts have made Changsha the first city in China with an anti-domestic violence work group. A city-level shelter for domestic violence survivors has also been founded.

The federation has also taken pains to ensure that men are involved in the city's anti-domestic violence work.

"We have a much better chance of fighting domestic violence if men are invited to participate," said one federation staff recently. In February 2009, the federation invited 20 male citizens to form an anti-domestic violence action group.

Promoting Women's Political Participation
As the level of women's political participation is the most important signal of gender equality, the Changsha Women’s Federation has worked closely with other government departments to get more women involved in politics.

In 2007 and 2011, the federation helped issue two important policies on cultivating and selecting women cadres, stipulating a quota for the number of women cadres appointed. With the support of the policy, many more women have had the chance to wield their influence in leadership roles.

In addition, women party representatives now account for 23.8 percent of all party representatives. Women in the city people's congress and the city's political consultative conference account for 21.78 percent and 25.1 percent respectively, putting the city on a higher level than the national women's political participation average of 21 percent.

Helping Women's Entrepreneurship
The Changsha Women's Federation has also paid close attention to the development of local women entrepreneurs. They have supported the launch of 337 women's business projects with total funds of 12.34 million yuan (US $ 2.01 million). They have helped 1,167 women apply for and receive small loans totaling 96.58 million yuan (US $ 15.7 million) altogether.

Guo Weibo, from a small town in Changsha County, is one of the women who have benefited from the small loans project.

More than 10 years ago, after Guo established her cattle raising business, she was hit with a succession of failures: shortage of pasture grass for the cold weather in winter, high cost of buying pasture grass from other areas and the death of 36 cows in the hot weather in summer.

It was only by receiving the small loan that Guo was able to weather the challenges and develop her business.

In addition to helping women entrepreneurs get funding, the women's federation has provided the women with free entrepreneurship education and training courses, and expert-level counseling on business management and project launching. These training and counseling sessions have helped upgrade the women's business skills.

Providing Financial Help to Women with Cancer
"This amount of money to my family is really a huge help," said one woman named Liu when she received 10,000 yuan (US$ 1,631) from the women’s federation to help pay for her cervical cancer treatment. Liu, who was a fiercely independent woman, had felt desperate after receiving her diagnosis. She was worried that the medical bills would financially cripple her already impoverished family.

Luckily for her, the local women's federation helped her after they came to know of her situation. Liu is one of the 338 underprivileged women suffering from breast or cervical cancer who have received financial aid from the federation.

Thanks to such dedicated efforts to help women in various aspects of their lives, the Changsha Women's Federation has won fame throughout China. Moving forward, the federation is determined to continue improving the lives and health of the local women that it serves.

Thursday, 18 July 2013

Greater gender equality seen in city


A survey has found that people believe there is greater equality between men and women in Shanghai than in the rest of China, local media reported Thursday.
The Shanghai Women's Federation and researchers from Fudan University polled 155 people for the survey, according to a report in the Youth Daily. The respondents gave Shanghai an average score of 80.74 regarding their perception of gender equality, accounting for factors such as employment, income, education and health. Respondents gave the country as a whole a score of 70.49.
Female respondents made up 67.7 percent of the sample. Nearly 46 percent of the respondents had a bachelor's degree.
When asked their feelings about International Women's Day, which falls on March 8 every year, about 42 percent of male respondents thought that Chinese women were highly respected, as opposed to 19 percent of female respondents.
More than 29 percent of female respondents expressed that they did not have any special feelings about International Women's Day. About 19 percent said they only felt good about having a half-day off work.
The survey's researchers pointed out that the disparity between the perception of men and women about the day was because male respondents paid more attention to its symbolic meaning, while female respondents focused more on its practical benefits.
Nearly half of both men and women agreed that men should take a more active role in promoting gender equality, according to the survey.
Also nearly 55 percent of the respondents favored the idea that men and women should enjoy equal rights, obligations, opportunities and treatment. More than 77 percent thought there were innate differences between men and women, but acknowledged that women still deserved equal treatment.
Women should have equal access to employment, education and healthcare, said Yan Wenhua, an associate professor in the School of Psychology and Cognitive Science at East China Normal University. "However, gender equality should be achieved by admitting that there are biological differences between men and women," she said.
The survey also explored respondents' attitudes about shengnü, which literally means "leftover women." The colloquial term can be used to describe unmarried women between the ages of 25 to 35, depending on the speaker's view about when a woman ought to be married. About 37 percent of the survey's respondents thought the word no longer conveyed a negative meaning, while 35.5 percent thought it implied a bias.
"People use the word shengnü on different occasions for different reasons. It is really difficult to say whether it is derogative," Yan said.

Wednesday, 17 July 2013

China Distributes More Than 100 Bln Yuan in Small Loans to Women


Under a financial support program, interest-free loans worth more than 100 billion yuan (US$16.3 billion) were distributed to more than 2.34 million women by the end of September 2012.
In the first nine months of 2012, about 55.31 billion yuan (US$9.02 billion) in small loans was distributed to women, outnumbering the total of the last two years, said Song Xiuyan, Vice President of the All-China Women's Federation (ACWF) at the 11th Executive Committee Meeting of the 10th National Women's Congress held on January 10, 2013 in Beijing.
In 1996, the China Women Development Foundation (CWDF) of the ACWF established a fund to issue small loans to help needy women shake off poverty. More than 20 provinces and regions across China have implemented financial support programs, such as the Hong Kong Poverty Alleviation Program and the Mary Kay Women Entrepreneurs, playing an active role in the poverty alleviation of women.
After 10 years of persistent efforts, the financial support program is making full use of a circular fund model. As the program develops, increasing numbers of women benefit from the small loans. The implementation of the program has demonstrated that it is a model for self-sustainable development and can provide distinct social and economic benefits.
In 2009, the ACWF, together with China's Ministry of Finance, the Ministry of Human Resources and Social Security and the People's Band of China, issued a notice to further improve the program and promote women's employment.
In accordance with the notice, the government has instituted a number of preferential policies for women increasing loan limits, coverage, lending agencies and subsidies.
In recent years, women's federations of different levels have actively negotiated with local authorities to advance the financial support program and worked hard to promote it, supervise loan implementation and provide post-loan services.
"Thanks to the efforts of various authorities, more women have benefited from the program," said ACWF Vice President Song.
"I have obtained loans of 100,000 yuan (US$16,300) in total to raise poultry and earn an annual net income of 30,000-40,000 yuan (US$4,890-6,52o)," said Yuan Zhanmei, a woman from Liangshuiquan Village, Huanghua Township, Chongxin County, Pingliang City, in northwest China's Gansu Province.
"I can pay off one loan within two years and I still have profit in hand," said Yuan. She has not only obtained good profit but also led village fellows to make money of their own.
The financial program has helped women like Yuan to obtain start-up funds and master various types of skills to embark on their paths to make their fortunes and shake off poverty.

Helping Women Achieve their Entrepreneurial Dreams


In China, there are a large group of women entrepreneurs who have not received formal business education and lack funding and social resources. However, the 'Goldman Sachs 10,000 Women MIT Sloan-Yunnan University Women's Entrepreneur Program' is changing all that by helping many of them learn more about business and financial management and launch a business project.

The Program
Three years ago Goldman Sachs established its 10,000 Women project, a US$100 million, five-year program to provide 10,000 women in underserved parts of the world with management education, access to capital, networks, and mentors. It operates through more than 80 academic and nonprofit organizations. To date it has reached 5,000 women in more than 20 countries.

In 2011, MIT Sloan joined the 10,000 Women project through the MIT Sloan-Yunnan University Women's Entrepreneur Program, a collaboration with the School of Business and Tourism Management of Yunnan University in Kunming, capital of southwest China's Yunnan Province. Three Yunnan faculties spent time at MIT Sloan for training in areas of entrepreneurship and action learning. A team of MIT Sloan faculty and administrators is assisting with the design of workshops and laboratory courses that the Yunnan faculty will teach to a cohort of 300 women entrepreneurs.

Case Study: Shang Meiling
Shang Meiling is one of the 300 Chinese women entrepreneurs who have benefited from the program. Not only has her vegetable growing business seen increased profits, but she has also used the knowledge she learned through the program to help her fellow villagers.

Born in a small village in Jianshui County in the Honghe Hani and Yi Autonomous Prefecture in southwest China's Yunnan Province, Shang's early life was a struggle. Although she worked hard in school and did well, she had to drop out after junior middle school to help her poverty-stricken family with farming work.

Despite this setback, Shang was determined to continue educating herself in some way. Through TV programs, books, and broadcast programs, she mastered advanced techniques in cultivating and marketing vegetables like onions, peppers, purple sweet potatoes and many others. She gradually gained local fame for her skill in growing onions.

It was then that it occurred to Shang that the individual farmers in her area could all benefit from a sort of cooperative through which the vegetables could be pooled and sold wholesale for higher profits.

To find out more, she listened to radio programs about vegetable cooperatives and how to sell by signing large sales contracts beforehand.

In December 2007, Shang and the other local farmers formed a cooperative named Miandian Town Vegetable Growth and Sales Cooperative. They also set up the Miandian Town Fruit and Vegetable Association.

With the help of Shang's years of experience in growing and selling vegetables, the cooperative succeeded in signing many contracts with several vegetable trade enterprises in the Honghe prefecture. The scale-management model brought abundant profit and the cooperative soon expanded quickly, with 260 more farmers joining in.

Expanding Sales Channels through the Internet
Despite their initial success, in 2008, vegetables in Miandian County faced a very poor market in sales. A 30-kilogram sack of onions could only be sold for 3 to 4 yuan (US$0.49 to 0.65).

Shang tried different ways to revive sales, but was unsuccessful. Then she watched a TV program about Internet businesses and hit upon the idea of marketing the vegetables online.

Shang sought the help of the local county's Sales and Marketing Cooperative to connect them to the 'Honghe Prefecture Farming Products Information Web' so that they could post information about the vegetables online. At the same time, Shang worked on strengthening relationships with older customers.

Thanks to her tireless efforts, Shang received more than a dozen calls or emails within a month, asking about their products and some making an offer to buy their products directly.

Shang later decided to choose the online sales model after comparing offer prices and purchase amounts. Her decision helped her to sell more than 5 million yuan (US$815,500) worth of onions for the first time.

In order to diversify the business, Shang's cooperative introduced many other kinds of vegetables through the information web.                           
Taking It to the Next Level
With the development of her vegetable business, Shang began thinking long-term about how to further optimize the agricultural industry's structure and meet the demands of rural economic development. To do this, she felt it was important that she learn about modern business management and agricultural development. .

In came the 10,000 Women project, which provided Shang with an opportunity to receive free high-quality training courses on women's entrepreneurship.

"After attending the training program, my business concepts have greatly improved. I also learned a lot about team building and financial management," said Shang. She added that the most important thing is that she made a lot of friends through the program who have given her many ideas on how to expand her business.

After the training, Shang created a plan to optimize her business's industrial structure. Developing profitable economical crops has become a priority of the optimizing process.

Based on her new knowledge on modern business management and her trips to agricultural bases in east China's Shandong Province and southwest China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, she chose Brazilian mushrooms as the new product to be introduced.

Since then, Shang's cooperative has developed a Brazilian mushroom growing base of more than 200 mu (33 acres) with an estimated annual growing capability of 540 tons by 2014. Profits are expected to reach more than 3.24 million yuan (US$ 527,796), with each farmer earning 3,000 yuan (US$ 489) each year.

Shang is just one of the women entrepreneurs who have benefited from the 'Goldman Sachs 10,000 Women MIT Sloan-Yunnan University Women's Entrepreneur Program'. Many other women entrepreneurs' stories are also as impressive as Shang's. It is to be hoped that similar programs will be launched in the future to help even more Chinese women achieve their entrepreneurial dreams.

Tuesday, 16 July 2013

Governments Gamble with our Future.South Feminists Demand Responsible Action Now


While governments were locked in their semantic battles in the Rio+20 process, women’s and other social movements continue to fight on multiple fronts for human rights, justice and sustainability. These struggles take place on diverse territories and geographies including the body, land, oceans and waterways, communities, states, and epistemological grounds. Each of these terrains is fraught with the resurgent forces of patriarchy, finance capitalism, neo-conservatism, consumerism, militarism and extractivism.
An understanding of the deeper structural roots of the crises we face today and analytical clarity on the inter link ages between different dimensions are both critical. There is no core recognition that the multiple crises we face are caused by the current anthropocentric development model rooted in unsustainable production and consumption patterns, and financialisation of the economy that are all based on and exacerbate gender, race and class inequities.
In sharp contrast to twenty years ago at the historic Earth Summit when linkages between gender and all three pillars of sustainable development were substantively acknowledged, the Rio+20 outcome document has relegated women’s rights and gender equality to the periphery without recognition of a wider structural analysis.
 Over the past few months we have witnessed and confronted attempts by a small group of ultra conservative states (with the strong support of an observer state – the Holy See), to roll back hard won agreements on women’s rights. We are outraged that a vocal minority have hijacked the text on gender and health and blocked mention of sexual and reproductive rights, claiming that these have nothing to do with sustainable development. Meanwhile most states concentrate on what they considered their 'big ticket' items of finance, trade and aid with little interest to incorporate a gender analysis into these macroeconomic issues.
There is a reference to women’s “unpaid work” but without recognizing the unequal and unfair burden that women carry in sustaining care and wellbeing (para 153). This is further exacerbated in times of economic and ecological crisis when women’s unpaid labour acts as a stabilizer and their burden increases. For example, reference to the root causes of excessive food price volatility, including its structural causes, is not linked to the risks and burdens that are disproportionately borne by women (para 116). Development is not sustainable if care and social reproduction are not recognized as intrinsically linked with the productive economy and reflected in macroeconomic policy-making.
Reference is made to the critical role that rural women play in food security through traditional sustainable agricultural practices including traditional seed supply systems (para 109). However these are under severe threat unless governments stop prioritising export oriented agribusiness. The reason why such wrong-headed policies are not adequately addressed is because of corporate interests that are protected in the Rio+20 outcome.

Impressive First Ladies around the Globe


In recent years, first ladies have begun to take a more active role in promoting diplomatic relations as they accompany their husbands on state visits.
Naturally, the fashion styles and demeanor of these prominent ladies have garnered much media and public attention, with some even attaining the status of minor celebrities. 
Hillary Clinton: The Most Active First Lady
From 1992 to 2000, Hillary Clinton was the First Lady of the United States, alongside her husband, then-President Bill Clinton. During that period, she gained worldwide attention and laid the foundation for her own future political career. She frequently accompanied her husband on his state visits or traveled alone.
In July 1993, she accompanied her husband to attend the Group of Seven Summit (G7 Summit) in Tokyo, capital of Japan. In 1994, she served as head of the U.S. delegation to attend the Lillehammer 1994 Winter Olympic Games in Norway and in 1995, she and then-U.S. Vice President Al Gore attended the inauguration ceremony of Nelson Mandela as President of South Africa.
Clinton has said that she often acted on her own to send out the message that a nation's prosperity is associated with women's education and happiness.
In her autobiography Living History, Clinton explained that state affairs largely depend on personal relations between state leaders, but that the relations require continual cultivation and various informal dialogues.
Glenn P. Hastedt and Anthony J. Eksterowicz, two professors from the Political Science Department of James Madison University, jointly wrote an essay titled First Lady Diplomacy: The Foreign Policy Activism of First Lady Clinton, and concluded that "Former First Lady Hillary Rodham Clinton was one of the most active first ladies in modern memory".
Carla Bruni: A Fashion Icon
Ex-model and singer Carla Bruni, wife of Nicolas Sarkozy who held the office as French President from 2007 to 2012, became famous as one of the best dressed and most poised first ladies around.
When she visited Britain with Sarkozy in 2008, the former model wore a grey hat and a grey turtle neck dress as well as a pair of black gloves to see Queen Elizabeth II. Her appearance won her a compliment from Harpers & Queen, a British fashion magazine, who described her attire as elegant and reminiscent of the late Princess Diana.
At the welcome banquet later that day, Bruni turned up in a gorgeous evening dress, occasioning a later comment from one British celebrity, who said that Bruni was the only topic of the night and no one talked about bilateral ties.
Britain's Daily Mail pointed out that Bruni had made the smart move of wearing all-British designers on her trip.
Bruni was selected as the ambassador for the Global Fund to Fight AIDS, Tuberculosis and Malaria on December 1, 2008, which was also World Cancer Day. Since then, she has visited several African countries and raised money for AIDS patients.
Political analysts have said that although she was not as politically influential as Hillary Clinton, Bruni went a long way towards enhancing Sarkozy's presidential image.
Miyuki Hatoyama and Kim Yoon-ok: The Most Approachable First Ladies
Miyuki Hatoyama, wife of then-Prime Minister of Japan Yukio Hatayama, and Kim Yoon-ok, wife of then-President of South Korea Lee Myung-bak, were well-known in their time for being two of the most approachable first ladies around.
When Hatoyama accompanied her husband to visit South Korea in 2009, Kim invited her to a Korean traditional cuisine institute, where she showed Hatoyama how to make Korean kimchi. Hatoyama used her bare hands to practice making the kimchi and when Kim told her that most modern Korean women wear gloves because they do not want the strong smell to stay on their hands, Hatoyama said that she would like to experience the making of kimchi with bare hands.
Kim had previously learned that Hatoyama had published many cookbooks, which is why she took the latter to a cuisine institute.
Although the two first ladies did not take part in diplomatic activities on their state visits, their charm and approachability made them very popular among the media and public.
First Lady Diplomacy
First lady diplomacy now makes up an important part of modern diplomacy. State leaders' wives are influential in enhancing the effectiveness of a country's public diplomacy and augmenting its soft power.
In some countries, first ladies have begun to undertake diplomatic duties. For example, it has become a fixed arrangement for the U.S. First Lady to host the families of foreign politicians at Camp David, the president's country residence.
Professor Zhang Xiaojin from the Beijing-based Tsinghua University says that first lady diplomacy can enhance transparency with regards to the first family's activities.
Depending on their backgrounds and interests, some first ladies may visit hospitals or schools on state visits or restaurants and museums to show respect for the host country's culture.
Nowadays, summit diplomacy usually has dual functions in public diplomacy and diplomatic protocol and thus, first lady diplomacy is an integral part of modern diplomacy, says Professor Zhang.

http://www.womenofchina.cn/html/womenofchina/report/151585-1.htm

Beijing Establishes Special Office to Distribute Small Loans to Women

A special office to supervise and manage the small loans for women program under the China Women's Development Foundation (CWDF) was established in Beijing on July 2, 2013.

The office, jointly set up by the CWDF and the Rural Development Institute of Chinese Academy of Social Sciences, aims to promote the smooth, systematic and professional operation of the small loans for women project, which could be a turning point in the project's development.

The project has been implemented in more than 20 provinces and cities since 1996, distributing more than 160 million yuan (US$ 26.08 million) in loans, benefiting more than 100,000 needy families and helping more than 300,000 women to start their own businesses. 

Monday, 15 July 2013

Guangxi Encourages Women to Join in Social Development


President of Guangxi Women's Federation Wang Gebing gives a speech. [Guangxi Women's Federation/Lei Xinrong]
The Guangxi Women's Federation plans to launch various activities for rural children and grassroots women, including migrant workers and entrepreneurs, to encourage them to take part in social development efforts.

The federation held a meeting in Nanning, capital of southwest China's Guangxi Zhuang Autonomous Region, on July 9, 2013, to announce the launch of these activities.

The federation will also hold an activity to educate migrant women and left-behind children, whose parents have left them in their rural hometowns to work in the cities, about the relevant laws and regulations that pertain to their rights and interests. In addition, migrant women will receive professional training in transportation, catering, tourism and shopping, which will allow them to get more involved in the tourism and service industries.

The Guangxi Women's Federation will also encourage women entrepreneurs to contribute to the development of local tourism or related industries.

Guangxi, located in southwestern China, is well known for its natural beauty and scenic spots, including the Lijiang River. Tourism is fast becoming the key to Guangxi's development. 

Thursday, 11 July 2013

Некоммерческое партнёрство "Звезда надежды" (Калининград)

'Eating Bitterness': Hardship and Opportunity for Rural Women in China


Young Xiuqiao slowly approaches the cold chamber of a rural Shaanxi Province mortuary, led by the facility's cremator, old Lao. She'd spent weeks searching for her sister, who'd gone out for migrant work and never returned home. Old Lao opens the chamber and prods Xiuqiao to have a look at the corpse's face. She reluctantly obliges and then slumps to the ground in despair -- but she doesn't shed a single tear.
This scene from an independent film called The Cremator is based on the Chinese concept of "eating bitterness," an expression that loosely means pushing ahead in the face of extreme hardship. In 2011, then 21-year-old Yang Sijia got her big break when she was chosen for two roles in the film -- a migrant worker who takes her own life, and her sister, Xiuqiao, who's left to deal with her suicide. Wanting to depict rural Shaanxi life authentically, the director used non-professional actors from the province. If Sijia's quiet agony was convincing, it was because her real life had entailed even more bitterness than her character's.
An oft-cited study published in 2002 found that, between 1995 and 1999, Chinese women committed suicide at a 25 percent higher rate than Chinese men -- a clear contrast with worldwide trends -- and that rural suicides happened at three times the rate of urban areas. The study shocked the nation and led to dozens of media reports. But now, more than a decade after its release, suicide rates among this demographic have plummeted.
According to Michael Phillips, executive director of the WHO's Suicide Prevention Center in Beijing and the conductor of the 2002 study, the male to female suicide rate is now nearly equivalent, and the rural rate is now just twice the urban rate. Furthermore, research by Tsinghua University Sociologist Jing Jun found that the suicide rate among rural women actually dipped below that of rural men back in 2006 and has since remained relatively steady at around 9 cases per 100,000 people, down from 33 in 1987.
Both researchers believe urbanization is the primary factor for this change. The proportion of rural workers traveling away from their hometown for employment has shot up from 7 percent of China's rural labor force in 1987 to nearly 30 percent today. Of those migrant workers, over a third are now women. Jing Jun says that by leaving for most of the year to work in cities, women are separated from abusive husbands and overbearing in-laws -- the primary stresses cited in cases of suicide among rural women. Separating women from pesticides -- a highly accessible and lethal substance correlated with impulsive suicides -- is another key factor.
But the dropping suicide rate may mask many of the issues that continue to put pressure on rural women both in the countryside and when they branch out into the cities.
Sijia was born in 1990 in a Shaanxi village of a few thousand, and was among the first generation of Chinese to grow up entwined in migrant life. As a child, she moved frequently with her migrant worker parents, an experience that made her feel like an outsider wherever she went. Because she was socially isolated, Sijia devoted herself to her studies and became a star student. Her future seemed bright. "But then during the summer between middle school and high school, something happened that wasn't very happy," she said. "It changed my life."
Her father had brought her to be a part-time cook for the summer at a golf course he was now working at, which was almost exclusively used and staffed by men. One evening, a woman at a neighboring shop on the course asked Sijia to stay and keep an eye on the place while she ran home. The woman told her she could even take a shower in the back while she was gone. Sijia agreed, went to the back and slipped out of her clothes. It was then that her father's boss came in.
"There was only one wall between us and where my dad was," she said. "I was crying but it was my dad's boss. I was scared, so I didn't scream."
The experience altered Sijia's perspective. Nevertheless, her studious habits stuck and she managed to get into a film college in Xi'an, an impressive accomplishment for a student with her background and something that would have been impossible for her parents a generation ago. But her problems weren't over.
During college she worked a gamut of part-time jobs to support herself, from selling clothes on the street to washing dishes. One job was at a high-end restaurant where she and another girl would greet customers at the door as they entered. But after a few months, her boss came to her and said he was scaling back. Only one of the two girls would be kept on. "If you're together with me, I'll keep you," he told Sijia. She decided to quit.
Throughout high school and college, Sijia sometimes cut herself and even attempted suicide four times by choking herself with a rope. But on each occasion, she lost her nerve before any serious damage was done. During this time that she began visiting a Buddhist "master" she'd met years earlier when her mother brought her to pray at a temple before an exam, an experience that slowly brought her out of her psychological torment. In contemporary China, where the constantly shifting social order has caused many to feel lost, interest in religion has skyrocketed.
"Buddhism teaches you to accept your destiny," Sijia said. "In a former life, I owed someone a debt, so I need to get rid of my sins. I used to want revenge on that man [from the golf course], but now I'm at peace with it."
In the summer of 2011, Sijia's life changed again when she was introduced to the director preparing to make The Cremator. After reading the script, she says she persuaded him that her life story was just like that of Xiuqiao's character, and that she could easily lend authenticity to the role.
When shooting began in rural Shaanxi, Sijia found herself almost completely surrounded by men. The sex ratio at birth in the province is now over 130 males for every 100 females (the skew is 118:100 nationwide). The imbalance is even greater in rural areas.
The demand for women brought about by this imbalance even extends into death in rural areas that practice a "ghost bride" custom, where unmarried dead are wedded posthumously and buried together so as to avoid a lonely afterlife. The gender imbalance has created a black market for ghost brides, a subject depicted in The Cremator.
Early in the film, a young woman is dredged from a river and taken to the local morgue. Its operators plan to sell the body for a "ghost marriage" but Old Lao, the terminally ill cremator, wants the girl to be his own eternal bride.
Sijia's character Xiuqiao shows up from another part of Shaanxi looking for her missing sister, who had come to the area to work as a cook for men in construction. Old Lao, not wanting to lose his ghost bride, turns Xiuqiao away, saying that no young women have turned up. Xiuqiao keeps looking, later turning to prostitution after running out of money during her search.
Eventually, Lao takes pity on the girl and shows her the body that turns out to be her sister.
Because there were no other young women to be found during filming, Sijia unexpectedly had to act as the corpse. This entailed being zipped into a body bag, slid into a morgue's cold chamber and shut into a coffin. Sijia was furious, but she says the complete isolation and feeling of death gave her a new perspective.
"The moment I laid down in the coffin, all sounds outside went away," she said. "The only thing I felt was that I would live up to my life's potential."
By most measurable indicators, the lot of rural women has improved dramatically in the decade since Michael Phillips' suicide study shocked the nation. In addition to the falling suicide rate, record numbers of women are attending college, rural healthcare has expanded greatly, and millions have been pulled from abject poverty.
But rural areas haven't kept up with cities, and women haven't kept pace with men. While per capita income tripled for rural residents from 2,253 RMB ($275) per year in 2000 to 6,977 RMB in 2011, incomes in cities nearly quadrupled from 6,280 to 23,979 RMB during the same period, according to China's National Bureau of Statistics. Rural women only earned 56 percent of what their male counterparts did in 2010, down from 79 percent in 1990. These gaps in money and power leave rural women vulnerable to exploitation.
Reliable statistics for sexual assault in China don't exist, but Tsun-Yin Luo, a professor at the Graduate Institute for Gender Studies at Shih-Hsin University in Taipei, estimates that fewer than one out of ten sexual assaults are ever reported in China. "The patriarchal culture actually brings sexual violence to female victims," she says. "Lots of victims of sexual assault feel ashamed of their victimization, and even if they don't feel ashamed, their family ensures that they feel ashamed."
Luo says that this disproportionally affects rural women, who don't have the same access to information about their rights. "Women in the countryside tend to be left behind," she says.
In coming years, China's growing gender imbalance will continue to shake up the dynamic for rural women, for better and for worse. The scarcity of females in the countryside is allowing women to be pickier about whom they marry and letting them marry into higher economic brackets.
However, instances of sexual assault and human trafficking for prostitution and bride-selling are on the rise. A 2009 study found that from 1988 to 2004, every 1 percent increase in China's gender imbalance increased violent and property crime by 3.7 percent. With roughly 1 million additional excess males reaching marrying age in China each year, some frustrated men are becoming more aggressive in finding partners. Last summer near Sijia's hometown in Shaanxi, a 38-member gang was busted for raping and selling women into prostitution.
It's hard to objectively measure whether the "bitterness" for rural women was greater in the past or will become greater in the future. Improving economic conditions concurrent with deteriorating social conditions is a common situation among young rural Chinese women -- a group with little power to speak out.
Sijia is still working on film sets and occasionally acting. In true "eating bitterness" fashion, she plays down the idea that her life is indicative of wider trends, saying she's just been unlucky and that her hardships aren't an of indictment on society. Overall, she's optimistic about her chances of being happy and for China to become a better place.
"I think you always have to have hope," she says. "My Buddhist mentor told me it's the heart that determines your environment. Good people will live in good places, and good places always have good people."


Wednesday, 10 July 2013

Making women's work count - Marilyn Waring

Can family farming make poverty history? By Katie Pisa, for CNN July 5, 2013 -- Updated 1549 GMT (2349 HKT)

Gender-sensitive Anti-Poverty Initiatives


During the three decades since the reform and opening-up, China’s rapid economic growth and development have made tremendous achievements in anti-poverty cause, and have made special contribution to poverty reduction around the globe. In 2009, the Chinese government lifted standard poverty line to 1192 yuan and adjusted impoverished population to 40.07 million, which, however, still could not meet the international standard. Meanwhile, the rapid economic growth has decreased the effects of poverty reduction. The sharp social transform has rendered poverty issue more complicated than ever, and the gap among different social groups in incomes, capital ownership, opportunity access and rights is becoming increasingly wider. During these two decades, China's income inequality condition continued to intensify, and China’s Gini coefficient has gone up from 31.7% in 1990 to 49.6% in 2007. Research has shown that the income of the 10% wealthiest population is over 27 times higher than that of the 10% poorest population (World Bank, 2009).
Moreover, a series of new problems have emerged from economic and social development, such as financial crisis in globalization, extreme climate and frequent natural disasters brought by the deteriorating environment, energy crisis and blind appropriation of land in modernization and urbanization which have led to property loss and hard life of farmers. All these problems, along with other problems in social classed and structure, bring about new impoverished population who are subject to social repel, more fragile livelihood and vulnerability to damages, thus lead to more complicated situation and greater challenges in anti-poverty work. This impoverished population is decentralized and diversified, thus we should adopt a multidimensional perspective towards the poverty issue and innovatively formulate anti-poverty plan and strategy.
UNDP has explicitly pointed out in its 1997 human development report “Human Development Eradicates Poverty” that, whether as ends or means, promoting gender equality should be included in the anti-poverty strategies of all nations. Innovative commitment to gender equality would help actions in all aspects, for women, as the main strength for poverty reduction, could bring about new energy, vision and organizational foundation. If gender is not taken into consideration, then development would full of challenges; if poverty reduction strategy could not successfully empower women, then it could neither empower the whole society (UNDP, 1997).
Today, new changes have taken place in China’s anti-poverty field from strategies to specific measures. Poverty-relief development, poverty aid, capability and capital accumulation and social insurance are combined according to different impoverished population, thus to further the development of poverty reduction.

http://www.womenwatch-china.org/en/newsdetail.aspx?id=3904

No progress without women in the post-Rio process



  ChiangMai(29June,2012):The Rio+20 Outcome Document did not break new ground for gender equality and women’s human rights,and did not establish any binding commitments from governments for just development.As we move past Rio+20,states have a vital opportunity to create and commit to Sustainable development Goals(SDGs) that can rectify in justices. Women from Asia Pacific demand that governments address four critical issues in the post-Rio process.Access to and control over resources,economic rights and a living wage, militarisation,and meaningful participation in policy-making significantly impact women across the region, yet states have made no commitments to resolve injustices.
We acknowledge that the Out come Document of Rio+20 recognise the importance of promoting gender equality and empowerment of women,and in particular the importance of women’s access to ownership and control over land and natural resources,healthcare,social services and education (paras.109,240);decent working conditions and social protection for women in the informal sector(paras.153,156); protection of human rights and fundamental  freedom of all migrants regardless of migration status, Especially women(para.157);and women’s full and equal participation in decision making and management and leadership in all areas at all levels(paras.45,236,237).
However,were main unconvinced that these will be made into policy with regulated mechanisms to make these commitments a reality.The‘green economy’is still based on the current neoliberal economy and will not resolve the financial,economic,food,energy and climate crises that the system has caused.Instead it will only deepen poverty,exclusion and injustice in society,especially for rural,indigenous and migrant women.Without addressing the cause of the crises and historical and structural discrimination against women,the‘green economy’will continue to marginalise rural,indigenous and migrant women.We are concerned that ‘green economy’ will merely instrumentalise women for economic growth and the profit of the private sector.
A full description of the critical issues for Asia Pacific women is attached.
The women of Asia Pacific remain committed to engaging in sustainable development in all its future measures,processes and structures.Weare determined to fully participate in establishing,supporting and monitoring the implementation of the sustainable development out comes and goals in the region.But we demand that governments address these key issues and commit to SDGs so women can have a leading voice in the post-Rio process.
  

  













Editorial: The Fight for Women’s Rights



 



On hot summer days, many urban professional women report that sexual harassment on the subway or bus has become an unbearable problem. Because of this, women's rights activists organized on Sina [a Chinese microblogging site] in late June 2012 to challenge Shanghai Metro authorities' statement that sexual harassment was incited by “scantily clad women.”  Other women quickly joined in, pointing out that criticizing a victim's clothing actually justifies the harasser's behavior and absolves him from accusations of sexual harassment.

Needless to say, sexual harassment is despicable behavior that also goes against regulations and is illegal. The root of this behavior lies in an extreme form of cultural consciousness that has framed men as the dominant sex and women as their dependents for thousands of years. However, according to media and internet surveys, about two-thirds of voters support the Shanghai Metro's viewpoint. These users persist in believing that “sexy clothes” are more likely to attract sexual harassers, and that women are therefore responsible for the harassment.

Some women offered testimonials of their actual experiences with sexual harassment, demonstrating that it occurred to women wearing all kinds of clothing, not just to those who were “scantily clad.” But the long-held tradition of passing moral judgment based on women's sartorial choices led people to form the opinion that women “wear less in order to entice perverts,” and therefore to criticize the victims. Shanghai Metro's authorities released the microblogging statement out of good intentions, but actually neglected to take practical measures to combat sexual harassment. Their primary responsibility as a public transportation service is to provide a safe and comfortable environment for all of their passengers.
 
If the controversy over sexual harassment on the subway reflects the differing values of feminists and a proportion of the public, then the family planning controversy of May and June touches on an even more deep-seated issue involving women's rights.  At the end of May, the scholar Yi Fuyin (易富贤) gave a speech in the United States advocating the abolition of family planning and encouraging women to have more children and “make the country wealthy and the military powerful,” thus raising the ire of feminists. In June, Feng Jianmei, (冯建梅), a woman from Zhenping County, Shaanxi, was forced to abort her pregnancy at seven months, causing widespread outrage and condemnation of forced abortions.

The feminists who criticized Yi did not do so to support compulsory family planning, but rather to support women's reproductive rights. There is no doubt that childbirth is a great burden on women, and the right to decide on having a child should reside with women. However, granting such a right is easier said than done. The country's economic development plan includes higher birthrates, the nationalist “make the country wealthy and the military powerful” slogan urges procreation, and families want younger generations to continue on their ancestral line in order to care for the elderly. Realistically, it is hard to hear the woman's voice in all of this.
 
The forced abortion incident in Zhenping county was a grave violation of women's rights, but in fact there are other factors controlling women's uteruses. These are hidden in the folk customs of selective abortions and preference for male children, leading women from disadvantaged backgrounds to be forced by their husbands or their families to bear more children. Behind the preference for boys and values that equate “more children with more happiness” lie an imperfect social security system and a weak elderly care system, so that people still rely on their children to avoid the challenges of old age as has been the case for thousands of years. 
If we want to ensure that all women are able to have reproductive autonomy, particularly those from disadvantaged backgrounds, a thorough reform of policy and custom is required. On an institutional level, the state must establish a system to improve social welfare for the elderly. From a cultural perspective, more must be done to develop equality between the sexes and change patriarchal customs. Achieving this goal will require raising women's social status, which will depend on guaranteeing women's rights to participate in education, employment, and politics. In terms of childbirth, women should be recognized and compensated for the burden of motherhood, and emphasis should be placed on the shared responsibility of husbands and wives in childrearing. Extra expenses should be covered by the social security system, and not by employers which might lack the resources to take on the added expense and simply ignore the regulations. An effort to transform these policies and customs will require the joint efforts of men and women, working through appeals and advocacy to fight for change.
 
In addition to the sexual harassment controversy and the forced abortion incidents, another important event involving women's rights that occurred this summer was the domestic violence case of the founder of the “Crazy English School,” Li Yang (李阳). [Editor’s Note: Li Yang’s American-born wife, Kim Lee, filed for divorce in late 2011 claiming she had been physically abused by Li. In a highly publicized announcement, a Beijing court ruled in February of this year for Lee, awarding her custody of her three daughters and compensation in the form of 50,000 RMB for psychological damages and a portion of the couple’s properties worth more than 12 million RMB.] The fight against sex discrimination in the job market has also become a hot topic. Yet reporters also used vulgar jokes to ridicule the female astronaut Liu Yang (刘洋).
 
From the controversy last year over a judicial ruling on marriage law, to this year's “Occupy the Men's Room,” and even the article about a controversy over a blind-date program in the charity sector featured in this issue of CDB, this summer has seen a non-stop series of hot-button incidents relating to women's rights. In these events, women's organizations and active netizens relied on the strength of citizen power to launch protests through the internet and to bring attention to their concerns through performance art. From marriage to childbirth to bathrooms to sexual harassment, women's direct concerns became topics for intense internet conversation with thousands engaged and interested.  Intellectuals, urban professionals, and female university students all joined in the conversation, forming one wave after another on hot-topic issues.  Since feminism was transmitted from the West thirty years ago, it has been limited to a few scholars within the realms of academia. But perhaps the present moment could be seen as a pivotal point in the development of women's rights within China.
 
 

Tuesday, 9 July 2013

Dynamics of modern-day slavery governed by demand and supply

Dynamics of modern-day slavery governed by demand and supply
 by Saadia Haq 

Palwasha*, 18-year old Afghani girl, has been a commercial sex-worker since she was 14. When she was only 15, she was forced into marriage with her rapist, also addicted to drugs. She was taken to Iran where she worked as commercial sex workers to pay for her husband’s addiction and make money for his use. She recalls those horrific days, saying, “ he used to beat me up very badly every day besides forcing me to make money for him,” she was quoted as saying in the AIHRC report. “After a year or so he sold me to an Iranian drug seller for a huge amount of money before my family found out about it in Afghanistan and my mother came to Iran to rescue me.”
The cause of the prevailing international trafficking on all continents stems from the demand. Like others illicit trades such as arm-dealing and drug trafficking, human trafficking is also an illicit market and is controlled by the basic economic theories of supply and demand.
Unfortunately, key stake-holders have assumed a unified silence towards the controversial topic of “demand.” There are very few international organizations, government programs or NGOs that touch on the topic of demand in human trafficking and the organizations that do pay attention on demand tend to center their efforts on abolishing sex trafficking. Amongst the handful of organizations that are unanimously in agreement to eradicate the demand and are concentrating their efforts for countering the demand side of human-sex-trafficking are the STOP DEMAND, THE Sage Project and Global Centurion. 
It’s essential to truly change the mindset of the slave buyer to eradicate modern-day slavery and end the demand for slaves. And to end demand, involved people (men and women both) need to be held accountable for their participation in buying women and children for sex.
Understanding patterns of organized criminal networks are also important to consider. The situational context is vital to also develop awareness of the recruitment practices. Many girls like Palwasha* and others fall into the hands of human-traffickers due to their vulnerable conditions such as poverty, illiteracy and impoverished house-holds.
Their recruitment usually takes place by “agents” or middle-persons (more than 65% are women) that lure their victims through girls through force (drugging/kidnapping); or coercion via promises of fake opportunities or boyfriends who trick young girls in to running away with them.
In starkly poor villages of Afghanistan, Pakistan and other countries, the women agents visit houses and speak face-to-face with parents, elderly establishing a trust within the community. This helps in getting significant large number of children, sometimes an extortion fee is also taken from the victim’s family to make the parents think that their children will get better rewards after reaching their destinations.  
Being a woman, nothing is more disgusting that to acknowledge that women are the key trust agents that engage with communities for such a dark intention.
Keeping in lieu the topic, examining demand within itself is like a dirty, dark road that has not light at the end of the tunnel.  At Islamabad, in the previous years, the dark side of diplomacy has also come to the surface. When media broke out the story that consular staff at the Switzerland Embassy was involved in a human trafficking racket. Switzerland immediately replaced all its embassy and consular staff in Pakistan. It also shut down its visa-section at Islamabad that followed a Pakistani investigation into the illegal Swiss visas that has led to a number of arrests.
Till date, Switzerland has conducted visa fraud investigations in countries including Oman, Peru, Russia, Nigeria, Serbia and Eritrea This all happened, thanks to Pakistani local media that started highlighting the plight of Pakistani visa applicants complaining about the various forms of harassment by Swiss embassy officials, or foreign expats as they are usually known.
A few weeks ago, Pakistan Embassy in Libya sent the Foreign Ministry an official letter that alleged that Federal Investigation Agency’s (FIA) Immigration department in Islamabad is involved in human trafficking. The embassy provided sustainable evidence to back its claims that travel documents were being used for opening bogus vacancies in fake companies, and added that the officials at FIA Immigration department in Islamabad are charging around 350 EURO per person to smuggle them abroad.
The letter added that hundreds of Pakistanis contact the embassy every day saying that they have no money to eat and appeal to be sent back to Pakistan. The embassy letter stated the urgent ban imposition for all Pakistanis traveling to Libya and to take action against the FIA officials involved. Further more, the report claimed that thousands of Pakistanis sent illegally to various places across the world are dwelling in jails, fallen into hands of trafficking networks and being meted out inhumanly treatment. It adds that countless have already died in the dire conditions.
On one-hand the human-flesh trade continues, but inside Pakistan, the prominent internationally recognized campaigner of human rights, Ansar Burney continues to serve are a whistle-blower.
Burney is a man with a mission. His mission broadly focuses on degradation, child abuse, sex-slavery, human trafficking and other more subtle forms of human and civil rights violations without any discrimination or affiliation.He has been working on issues of sexual slavery in Pakistan, the Middle East and Africa for two decades now.

During this time, with assistance from the various governments and authorities, through his organization the Ansar Burney Trust, he has secured the release of thousands of persons from false imprisonment and slavery across the world; these have included young girls sold in the sex trade and young children used for modern-day slavery.
In 2005, the Ansar Burney Trust was involved in the release and repatriation of 13,967 victims (under-age) from the Middle East alone. A shocking case came to light, when Burney rescued a group of under-age trafficked girls sold into prostitution in Middle Eastern countries.
During the investigations, it was revealed that the greater demand of “under-age virgin” girls continues to rise in the Middle East.  The traffickers used the horrible method of blood capsules on the girls’ bodies in order to “prove” their virginity.
In an interview with local media, Burney denounced this inhumane practice and warned that “use of such blood packed in capsules used by human traffickers to show that girls are virgin, may contain viruses that can spread AIDS or other contagious diseases.”
The issue of children both boys and girls being trafficked into sexual slavery highlights other dimensions within the demand chain. While we cannot argue on the feminization of human trafficking, the other gender is not really safe either. In recent times, young boys too fall prey to such traffickers for sexual exploitation. A non-governmental organization Modar (working in Tajikistan) says said there was a growing trend in the abduction and sale of Tajik boys for sexual exploitation abroad.  It reports that s groups in the United Arab Emirates, Turkey, Pakistan and other countries were prepared to pay as much as $70 000 for a Tajik boy between the ages of 10 and 12.
Unfortunately, human trafficking is one of the longest established, yet most neglected problems in all continents. Palwasha’s* story is a tip on the iceberg of the many cases of human trafficking which happen, literally under our noses, every day.
She may be lucky to be rescued but the scars inflicted upon her soul may not perish. But. Countless others not even teeny-weeny bit lucky as her to get rescued at all from this web.