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Integrating gender in Order of Nurses programs

8-7-2020

The National Commission for Lebanese Women (NCLW) signed yesterday a Memorandum of Understanding with the Order of Nurses represented by its president  Mirna Abi Abdallah Doumit at NCLW Hazmieh premises. The MoU seeks to integrate the concept of gender in the activities and programs of the Order of Nurses through conducting an assessment study related to the extent of application by the Order of the Participatory Gender Audit for further integration. The latter to note is a tool applied by the UN and the national mechanisms concerned with gender equality and women’s issues with the aim to develop relevant gender policies within each institution. NCLW is expected to implement the study in line with the methodology adopted by ILO. Specialized facilitators appointed by the Commission, in collaboration with a task force from the Order of Nurses, will carry out individual interviews with the coordinators, commissioners and members as well as partners of the Order from civil society organizations, in addition to workshops organized to this effect. (NNA, July 7, 2020)
 
 

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The “tax of motherhood” by Yusra Mokaddam

7-7-2020

In its issue of July 3d, An Nahar daily spotlighted a new book by Yusra Mokaddam, “Morning of the 25th of December”. The publication which is the third by the sociologist, novelist and feminist activist after “Mo’annath Al Riwaya” and “Al Harim Al Lughawi”, is a genuine and expressive book that talks about the tax of motherhood. According to Mokaddam, An Nahar wrote, a mother is like someone confined to a cage. She ignores herself completely for the sake of her children, reminding her that bravery inside a cage never works. The book, Mokaddam explained, is a monologue in which the author speaks her mind. She recounts that she witnessed her father’s death while her mother was still in her twenties, an outstanding woman left with five children. The author, An Nahar said, watched her mother’s silent suffering at night and how this changed her into a strong and resilient mother struggling to protect her own kids during the day. Mokaddam spoke of an apostolic and mandatory motherhood, expounding that she could not see her mother but a faultless supreme human being. Yet, in other Lebanese communities, she maintained, a female is brought up to suppress her body and deliberately mask her intimacy. She concluded by saying that feminism to her is not radical, sustaining that she supports a peer-to-peer equipotent relationship. (An Nahar, July 3, 2020)

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Sporting Club bans entry of veiled woman

6-7-2020

The Sporting Club in Ain Mreisseh, banned entry of a veiled (muhajaba) woman who was accompanied by her daughter Farah Choucair and granddaughter, justifying this act by the policy of the resort which disallows muhajabat from entering the pool with clothes on. On the subject, Choucair told Al Akhbar daily that when the receptionist could not explain why her mother was barred from entering, and when she insisted that her mother only wanted to have coffee near the pool and help her out with her child, Farah said: I saw one of the managers who did not clearly state his point of view but repeatedly said she should be wearing the swimsuit. Said club, Farah lamented, does not spell out its policy through a sign that shows clearly its entry rules. Meanwhile, while tourism ministry sources confirmed to Al Akhbar that the tourism police will open an investigation to this effect, the Sporting Club administration reiterated in a statement that no one can enter the pool except in a swimsuit, irrespective of sect or gender. For his part, the president of travel and tourism companies in Lebanon, Jean Beiruti, said veiled women cannot be unconditionally disallowed from entering swimming pools. But if the private swimming club has specific rules within a specific area, these should be visible to all, provided they don’t disagree with public order or suggest any form of racism or violation of public freedoms. Similarly, Rana Bou Karim of the Anti-Racism Movement, pointed out that the party grieved can sue the Sporting Club, stressing that similar practices are in clear breach with the circular of the ministry of tourism which bans discrimination in all its forms. (Al Akhbar, July 6, 2020)
 

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Dancing during COV-19 lockdown

3-7-2020

Two weeks after the lockdown enforced by the coronavirus pandemic, the organizers of “Larva” project (electronic portal showing expressionistic dance films) sent a short script to a selective group of creative writers around the world asking them to write messages about their future aspirations, Al Akhbar reported. After receiving the writers’ scripts, choreographers breathed life into the texts lending it shapes and colors with their bodies unveiling “Flashes from the Future”. The latter, Al Akhbar wrote, is a limited web series consisting of home-produced dance films. According to the project’s organizers, collaboration between multiple art forms paved the way for a different tomorrow and helped in the crafting of a potential future. The films, to recall, were aired in May and will run until July 17. The Lebanese audience will be looking forward for films by Lebanese Synthia Deryan and Alice Massabki between July 6-10. (Al Akhbar, July 3, 2020)

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Local initiative in France to save restaurants distressed by Covid-19

3-7-2020

In its issue of today, An Nahar wrote that as a result of Covid-19 crisis which hit the hospitality industry, the World’s 50 Best Restaurants organization decided not to grade competitors or publish the results of the competition for this year due to the coronavirus and all restaurants were declared winners. Instead, An Nahar reported, 50BestRestaurants decided to launch a fundraising auction initiative on July 3 to bid for gastronomic experiences in France in order to help restaurant whose businesses have been severely hit by the pandemic. In this respect, the director of World 50 Best Restaunts, Helene Pietrini told AFP that the auction is the biggest and unprecedented event including more than 130 bidders and will run from July 3-12. Many world chefs, she said, responded to proposals inspired by their life under lockdown. In addition, they will screen presentations from their star-rated restaurants. (An Nahar, July 3, 2020)

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Indian woman journalist reporting coronavirus

3-7-2020

Indian journalist Barkha Dutt decided to chronicle stories of the impact of Covid-19 pandemic on poor fellow citizens. Accompanied by the producer, cameraman and driver, Dutt set out on a 100 day journey covering 23,000 km of towns across India to write about what she called the ‘most important story of our life’. Since last March, the contemporary and controversial TV journalist travelled through the Indian continent to relate narratives of the coronavirus crisis describing the journey as “emotionally strenuous”. Speaking to AFP, Dutt recounted what she saw in one of Delhi’s hospitals. “There were loads of dead bodies, and I attended many funerals“, she says. Her work, she explained, sheds light on class differences in India, saying she never once thought she would see that scale of humanitarian poverty and the streams of people walking for thousands of kilometers. The lockdown, she maintained, has hit hard millions of migrant workers, forcing the poor to pay the highest price while cushioning the blow on the middle and upper classes. Concluding, Dutt said she carried many stories of despair and hope which she published as features on YouTube. (An Nahar, July 3, 2020)

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BAU students first runners in startup competition

1-7-2020

A group of students of the Faculty of Architecture- Design & Built Environment, Beirut Arab University (BAU) were the first runner-up in a pan-Arab competition of startups for best innovative solutions. The group comprising Louai Ghazawi, Iman Najjar, Haidar Mikdad and Jana Chami has been qualified for the finals which include contesters from 11 countries around the world. Recalling, that the above team has established an enterprise, INFRASTIC, specialized in the production of construction materials of which more than 60% are recyclables (normally un-recyclable). The project, to note, is one of the newest concrete technology companies. The INFRASTIC team came first runner-up in the 13th Edition of Arab Startup Competition “Ideas Track” organized by MIT Enterprise Forum (MITEF)- Pan Arab. Eleven groups reached the semifinalist stage. (An Nahar, July 1, 2020)
 

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NASA to name its DC headquarters after first black female engineer

30-6-2020

NASA administrator, Jim Bridenstine, said the space agency will rename its headquarters in Washington DC after Mary Jackson, the first black female engineers to join the agency. Bridenstine announced in a statement that Mary W Jackson was a part of a small group of very important women who helped NASA succeed in getting American astronauts into space. According to the British Daily Mail, Jackson (died in 2005) joined NASA in the fifties of the past century. In 1958, she became the first black aviation engineer at the agency and has contributed to several research studies, related mainly to supersonic flights. (An Nahar, June 30, 2020)

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Unified work contracts preserve Kafala 

29-6-2020

Al Akhbar highlighted on Saturday the new unified work contract for migrant men and women domestic workers in the works by the labor ministry. The latter, the newspaper wrote, has decided to adjust the kafala system (sponsorship) rather than abolish altogether a system which enslaves thousands of workers. On the subject, FENASOL president, Castro Abdallah, described to Al Akhbar the ministry’s accomplishment as an “incomplete move” or a “failed attempt” on its part giving two main reasons for that. The first, is that instead of redrafting the contract, the ministry should have amended the labor law, specifically Article 7, which excludes domestic workers as a profession like any other. Secondly, the contract itself is obviously “unfinished” in the absence of the primary party, workers, or representatives of them, from the meetings to this end. Over and above, the contract exposes weaknesses in terms of the mechanisms aimed to ensure the proper implementation of its provisions, expounded Abdallah. Likewise, Farah Salka of the Anti-Racism Movement, said there is no need for roundtable discussions or a unified contract to reframe kafala system which should be totally annulled. Nothing, she maintained, can be reformed in a system that enslaves the worker. The representative of KAFA organization, lawyer Mohana Isaac, for her part, noted that changing the work contract is not a solution to the dilemma. It is like putting a good face on a bad situation if not accompanied by other steps. These include, beside the amendment of the labor code, the development of clear mechanisms to monitor and put in practice provisos stipulated in the contract. (More info in the link below: https://bit.ly/3eN6nlu). (Al Akhbar, June 27, 2020)
 

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Strategic plan to protect women and children in partnership with UNICEF

26-6-2020

With EU- financial support and in partnership with UNICEF, the Ministry of Social Affairs (MOSA) launched on June 24 its Strategic Plan for the Protection of Women and Children for the period 2020-2027. The above plan focuses on strengthening MOSA’s leadership and regulatory role in child protection and protection against gender-based violence, as well as ensuring coordination and integration between the public and private sectors, including civil society, to secure the delivery of comprehensive and quality services for target groups. This will reportedly contribute to reinforcing the national system for the prevention and response to child protection violations and gender-based violence. On the occasion, UNICEF Representative in Lebanon, Yukie Mokuo, pointed out that the plan constitutes a roadmap for the ministry to move forward in committing to the protection of women and children. It also represents an exceptional opportunity to streamline efforts across the Lebanese government, civil society organizations and private sector partners, with the support of the international community to this effect. For his part, minister Ramsey Mcharafieh, said the protection of women and children from all nationalities, Lebanese, Syrian and Palestinian, is an ethical and humanitarian duty and a firm commitment rather than an option. “I am committed to protect women and children against any form of violence or discrimination, respecting their rights, upholding their interests and defending them in both words and action,” Mcharafieh stated. )An Nahar, June 24, 2020(
 

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