A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
A Brief Colonial History Of Ceylon(SriLanka)
Sri Lanka: One Island Two Nations
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Thiranjala Weerasinghe sj.- One Island Two Nations
?????????????????????????????????????????????????Tuesday, April 30, 2013
Gender And Inclusion: A Change Of Attitude Needed
The European Union has set a target of 40% for
female non executive directors in European corporate entities by 2020.However
some European nations oppose mandatorily enforced quotas to achieve this
aim.
One
of the opponents, Britain’s Vince Cable, the Business Secretary – Britain has a
25% voluntary target by 2015 – recently warned: “Government continues to believe
that a voluntary led approach is the best way forward, but the Cranfield School
of Management’s annual Female FTSE Board Report also serves as a timely reminder
to business that quotas are still a real possibility if we do not meet the 25%
target.”
The
25% target for FTSE 100 boards by 2015 was set in a government commissioned
report, two years ago. The Report states that the current percentage in Britain
is only 17.3%. Mandatory quotas have been legislated in countries such as
Malaysia, the Philippines, Kenya, Hong Kong and the UAE. Recently Chancellor
Merkel of Germany was compelled to announce quotas for women directors on German
corporate boards by 2020. This was after strong pressure by a group led by
Labour Minister Ursula von der Leyen.
The
World Economic Forum has produced the Corporate Gender Gap Report, which
explicitly states that “women are still failing to break into senior management”
in business. In Japan, Prime Minister Abe has requested Japanese corporations to
have a target of at least one female executive each. He described women as
‘Japan’s most underused resource’ Women constitute only 1.6% of executives in
listed corporates. Only 15% of Japanese corporations have any female executives
at all.
The
Daily FT some time ago ran a piece titled ‘No place for women in Lankan
boardrooms’. The editorial the next day, on ‘Women: Undisputed equal partners of
progress,’ highlighted the fact that Sri Lanka’s performance in women’s
participation in politics was worst in the region.
India
Some
vote hunters and gatherers complained that women were in the basement of
politics and hailed India’s initiative on a constitutional amendment for
reservation of slots in Parliament for women. But if they watched how some
Indian male politicians behaved in Parliament’s Rajya Sabha, to block the
amendment, live on TV, it would be a reality check on male attitudes!
Arun
Jaitely, Leader of the Opposition in the Rajya Sabha, said that it was a
historical occasion on two counts; firstly they were enacting the most
progressive legislation ever, the Women’s Reservation Bill, and secondly, the
behaviour in the House reached a new low! Unruly MPs were ejected by Marshals.
The law reserves a third of all seats in the Indian National Parliament and
State Legislatures for women. Rajiv Gandhi when Prime Minister enacted
legislation which reserves a third of Panchayats seats for women, which has
significantly increased the role of women at that 4th level of government. Sonia
Gandhi was the moving force behind the current initiative, which was first
proposed in 1996. It is still pending!
Even
more depressing is how the male-dominated political parties have dealt with the
draft of the statute brought to the Indian Parliament after the recent horrific
gang rape of a woman student in a moving bus in New Delhi. One politician has
gone on record that there is no such thing as ‘marital rape’! Another has said
that ‘rape’ should be confined to women, for males who are abused it should be
merely an unnatural offence! These people are living in the dark ages.
When
the bill was tabled in the Lok Sabha, the real attitude of the average male
Member of Parliament to their women voters was laid bare. Chauvinistic stories,
anecdotes and satire came into play in the debate. Sharad Yadav, Leader of the
pro-Government JD (U) from Mumbai, who at one time chaired the Indian Cricket
Board and International Cricket Council, confessed: “Who amongst us have not
followed girls?” – admitting to and trivialising the offence of ‘stalking’ made
a crime under the new law.
He
should be happy that the law does not apply ex post facto, to stalking committed
before it was a criminal offence! He went on to express the opinion that after
this new law, the Criminal Law (Amendment) Act of 2013, is enacted, women might
not get jobs: “Men would be scared to give jobs to women.”
He
cited as evidence the so-called misuse of the Anti Dowry Law in India, which
Indian women fought hard to get enacted to protect young brides from dowry
deaths, being burnt alive in most cases, due to the in-laws and husband
supposedly not being paid the negotiated and agreed dowry. No wonder Indian
women international cricketers complain that they are discriminated against, if
this is the attitude of a one-time Chairman of the Indian Board of Control for
Cricket and the ICC.
The
SP Leader Mulayam Singh said: “There is no need for this law. You are giving all
rights to the police. We men will be wrongly implicated.” He went on to say that
the prevailing law is perfectly adequate to deal with rape offences. He even
proposed abolishing co-educational institutes.
Lalu
Prasad of the RJD, former Chief Minister of Bihar – who very graciously
installed his illiterate spouse as Chief Minister when he was confined to the
Chief Minister’s bungalow, a luxurious, substitute jail, for a corruption office
over a cattle fodder scam – questioned “should we cover up the naked sculptures
at Kahjuraho and Konark?” to adhere to the spirit of the new law. These are
ancient sculptures depicting various poses for copulation and sexual relations
among human beings as said to be described in the Indian epic, the ‘Kama
Sutra’.
Change
in mindset required
However,
the few women Parliamentarians in the Indian Lok Sabha aggressively supported
the new law – demanding a change in the mindset of Indian people, arresting
false moral values and for the launch of a reformist campaign which would
educate people on equal gender rights, respect and dignity of women.
The
law as finally passed provides stringent punishment for crimes against women,
including natural life term and even death for repeated offences of rape. For
the first time penalties are imposed for offences such as stalking, voyeurism,
acid attacks and trafficking in women. For the first time it is a punishable
offence for police personnel to decline to register a First Information
Report.
The
law has been enacted, but a mindset change will take at least a generation. The
new educated and upwardly mobile, internet and mobile phone savvy, young middle
class Indians , with their Apple iPhones, Barista cappuccinos, Beemer (BMW) SUVs
and designer outfits will be the catalysts at the front line of the battle,
driving for the change of ideas and attitudes towards women in India.
Incidentally,
Ram Singh, the leader of the gang rape gang and who stole and drove the bus for
the purpose, is supposed to have committed suicide inside Delhi’s high security
Tihar jail! His family and lawyer allege that he was murdered. He was found
hanging in his cell, in which other cell mates were also confined. An eye for an
eye?
Sri
Lanka
In
Sri Lanka, at the last count, only four of the top 20 listed companies on the
CSE have female directors. Points were made, seminars were held, including one
organised by SLID, the pundits made their presentations, politicians promised
and pontificated on or around Women’s Day.
But
I challenge any reader to show me a billboard anywhere in the island showing a
daughter as a collaborator in the business. The equivalent of the alternative
gender, Perera & Sons, or Silva Brothers, is easy to find. But why is it
always sons and not daughters, brothers and not sisters? In this country where
the female population outnumbers the male statistically, where it is said that
over 60% of the accountancy students are females, where 63% of professionals are
women, why this gender disparity in the fields of business and enterprise?
Our
level of female emancipation and participation here, except in certain
exceptional situations, is extremely liberal, for South Asia. The teachings of
the Gautama the Buddha set a fairly high standard on gender participation among
the majority of the population, even though it is said that. Rev. Ananda had to
plead with the Buddha three times to allow women into the Order.
But
in generality an affirmative and liberal attitude has prevailed on gender
issues, which has been strengthened by non fee levying education accessible
cutting across gender biases and non fee levying health services being available
to all, empowering women by permitting them to control their own fertility and
not to be dictated to, on it, by men.
Free
health service to those who could not afford it has been available since around
the time of universal franchise in 1931. Education is the great leveller, the
greatest provider of upward mobility, but there exists a glass ceiling; we need
systemic changes if we are get a maximum return of the potential among our
female population for the huge investment made in education, healthcare and
other social welfare expenses.
In
the employment pyramid, at the bottom and mid levels, female participation and
contribution is high; one has to only look at the teaching service, government
clerical and private sector secretarial, garment, plantation and subsistence
agriculture and foreign employment sectors. We have to examine gender
discrimination and exorcise it from the system.
Vital
social and economic role
For
example is it justifiable that we consider and classify those involved in
home-based child rearing, caring for elders, household assistants (a.k.a.
domestic servants) and home-making, a socially vital and key economic task that
the majority of women are involved in, as unemployed? The Daily FT some time ago
referred to 48.4% of the female population over 15 years as being economically
inactive – home-makers, childminders, carers of the aged – economically
inactive?! It’s time that someone took another look at this definition!
Women
involved in those tasks may not bring an economic return immediately, but they
are nurturing the future generation or caring for the aged, releasing people
from the drudgery of housework to be active economically outside the home, and
play a vital social and economic role, on which the future of humanity
depends.
If
women are to focus less of this aspect and go out to work, or even engage in
economic activity in the home, arrangements must be made for childcare
facilities, home-maker support and care for elders. Or, in the alternative,
women involved in that type of work should be given an economic reward and
benefit.
Consider
home-makers, child and aged carers as playing a vital role and recognise their
economic contribution, quantify it and reward it – there are ways of doing this
that will make the role of women more meaningful than all the sanctimonious
pontification and platitudes being expressed on women’s rights once a year on
Women’s Day.
Sri
Lanka faces a critical problem in this regard since our current birth rate is
only around 0.7%, well below replacement level, which is 2.1%; every woman has
to have more than two children for us to maintain today’s population numbers.
Our population is in decline, and we have to do everything we can to get both
the brawn and the brains of all our citizens to contribute to the economy.
We
need the brains of educated women to strengthen our competitiveness in
management, manufacture, trade and services. We have to include women in the
pool of talent we have at our disposal for national development. Women have to
be liberated from the financially unrewarded drudgery of household tasks,
childminding and aged care activities and be freed to participate in the economy
or in the alternative recognise those vital tasks as an economic contribution
and reward it meaningfully.
The
vital role mothers and women in the extended family play in the nurture of their
children should not be underestimated. Employment rules must be flexible so that
women can leave full-time employment for child bearing, child caring and aged
care purposes and rejoin the work force without detriment when the children are
old enough to be placed in nursery school or when care could be provided to aged
dependants.
The
law must recognise the responsibilities of men in home-making, childcare and
care for the aged. Paternity leave is a concept which must enter our lexicon in
the field of labour law.
Mallika
Sarabhai
In
India, Mallika Sarabhai, a dancer of international repute, who has stood in
general elections, spoke thus on the Women’s Reservation Bill: “India made a
promise to its women at independence, a promise of living with dignity,
opportunity, self pride, fearlessness. Today India may have unleashed forces
that could bring succour to her deprived, her marginalised, her unsung and
unheard. Some men plundered our bodies and souls, and dishonoured us, made us
afraid of further sanctions. For women are too often the loot – our bodies, our
minds, our thoughts, our wombs. But aren’t women greedy and corrupt as men? Yes
some are, trapped alone in gutters, called male corridors of power, tutored by a
patriarchal society that equates selfish self interest and greed as cleverness,
but there is the very real possibility that the women will not play by the same
rules, that they will in a group be able to let their instincts of cooperation,
inclusiveness and caring, nurturing and problem solving prevail. The road is
long. Women need to be chosen, trained, tutored, and equipped – not in corrupt
ways but in governance, in delivery of benefits and empowerment, in
transparency.” The infamous rape on the moving bus in Delhi proved her correct a
thousand times over.
Increasing
women’s participation
The
IFC and the World Bank have collaborated on a publication, assisted by the
Governments of the UK and Canada, on ‘Gender Dimensions of Investment Climate
Reform,’ a guide which will help policymakers and development practitioners
design and implement reform to increase women’s participation in business in
developing countries.
Sevi
Srimavi, author of the guide, says: “Countries that do not capitalise on the
potential of women run the risk of severely undermining their competitiveness
and economic growth; this Guide is designed to help capture this untapped
potential and expand opportunities for economic development.”
Pierre
Guislan, Director of the Investment Climate Department of the World Bank Group,
said: “Working on reforms to foster women’s entrepreneurship is our strategic
priority; this publication builds on our own extensive experience working with
governments on business enabling environment issues and responds to the
increased demand from governments and practitioners on how to promote women’s
economic participation.”
To
make the policy environment favourable to women’s participation in business, the
fundamental requirement is that the voices of women must be heard and listened
to. There has to be empowerment of women. In 2005 Norway did just that. The
Government gave listed firms just two years to put 40% women on their boards of
directors, under threat of liquidation for non-compliance. Norway’s aim was
social justice.
Those
who oppose quotas mouth the usual platitudes about ‘quotas not working’! Try
telling that to the scheduled castes and tribals in India who have benefited,
been empowered and emboldened by reservation schemes in university admission and
Government jobs in India. Equity can only be brought about by bold steps. Not by
sanctimonious and patronising platitudes repeated ‘ad nauseam’!
Financial
inclusion
There
is a serious financial inclusion issue here too. Consider the microfinance
sector. In Sri Lanka and the world, 80% of microfinance borrowers are
marginalised women. Yet Sri Lanka is one of the few developing countries which
do not have in place a statutory regulatory mechanism for microfinance.
Would
this attitude of indifference and inaction by male-dominated regulatory and
political institutions have prevailed or even been tolerated for a day if men
were 80% of the people to whom vital financial services were being provided, to
a hitherto unbanked sector of the population, by microfinance institutions? This
even withDivi
Neguma micro finance being touted as the new development mantra
catalyst. Does the answer lie within the fiery statement of Mallika
Sarabhai?