|
IRAQ: Unemployment forces
female professionals into domestic work
July 25, 2006 - (IRIN) Najla Muhammad, 34, is a
biologist who graduated from one of the best universities in the
capital. Unfortunately, however, rising unemployment has forced
her to seek work as a housekeeper in order to support her family.
“I didn’t have a choice. My family was going to starve
if I didn’t find a better job,” says Najla. “For
years I worked in a scientific laboratory in Baghdad, but they couldn’t
pay all their employees. I was left with three children and a mother
to look after.”
Najla now works as a housekeeper to make ends meet, receiving between
US $100 and US $120 dollars a month. Her husband, meanwhile, holds
a degree in economics but has been unemployed for nearly a year
and has few prospects for work.
National unemployment figures have risen ever since the occupation
of the country by US-led forces three years ago. Local NGOs say
this has led to increasing numbers of female professionals being
driven to search for work as domestic servants.
“In most cases, they seek work as housekeepers,” says
Mayada Zuhair, vice-president of the Women’s Rights Association
of Iraq. “But you can also find doctors working as hairdressers,
dentists working as chefs and engineers working in Laundromats.
They’re desperate, and with poverty increasing, the situation
could get much worse.”
Up to half of the national population is currently unemployed in
Iraq, where women represent almost 60 percent of the total populace.
“For women, the [unemployment] figure is almost 70 percent,
meaning that many of them must search for low-status jobs,”
says Zuhair.
Precise unemployment figures have been difficult to peg down. In
2005, the Ministry of Planning cited 30 percent, while the Ministry
of Labour and Social Affairs put it at 48 percent. According to
the Washington-based Brookings Institute’s 2005 Iraq Index,
the figure is somewhere between 28 and 40 percent.
“I’ve been searching for work since I lost my job in
2003, so I decided to work as a housekeeper,” says Suha Abdel-Kareem,
30, an engineering graduate from Baghdad. “Since then, I’ve
been cleaning houses and washing clothes – even though I studied
for four years to become an engineer. But I had to support my children
after I became widowed.”
While government officials say the problem affects everyone, some
activists insist that gender discrimination has made the situation
particularly difficult for women. “If they have to choose
between a man and a woman, they’ll choose the man, especially
for important positions,” says female politician and activist
Maysoon al-Damaluji. “If there were quotas in place and gender
discrimination was illegal, maybe fewer women would be unemployed
today.”
Many women also complain that domestic work can often be degrading,
especially for someone holding a college degree. “I was forced
to do things I never imagined doing, like cleaning children’s
vomit or wee,” says Hiba Jumeili, 28, an architect who works
as a housekeeper. “And when I refused, my employer would slap
me. So I had to just shut up and do it because my children needed
food.”
In some cases, female professionals have reacted aggressively when
asked by employers to do something seen as being beneath their station.
“It’s hard for them to work as housekeepers after years
of study,” says Zuhair. “Sometimes they can’t
accept being treated badly.”
According to Jenan Mubarak, director general of the Iraqi Centre
for Women's Rehabilitation and Employment, “discrimination
and harassment” are commonplace for many women holding jobs
as domestic servants.
To make matters worse, the experience of doing domestic work is
particularly painful for many educated women as because it is traditionally
looked down upon. “Many of my friends treat me differently
because I’m working as a housekeeper,” Jumeili says.
“Some stopped coming to visit me because I’m no longer
on the same social level they are.”
From: http://irinnews.org
|