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[Singapore] - AWARE applauds BooksActually women for coming forward, temporarily suspends partnership

UltimaOnline

Alfrescian (InfP)
Generous Asset
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Allegations indicate "multiple types of abuse"​



Hingorani also highlighted Leck's ex-wife Renee Ting's account in particular, and said that her experiences included domestic violence.

"Leck was not just her boss but her husband, and he took steps to isolate her from her family - a common hallmark of domestic abuse," she said.

Ting alleged that Leck would speak badly of her sisters, which led her to distance herself from them.

Hingorani also said the accounts from other former employees also involve "unfair labour practices and exploitation", where Leck reportedly withheld or delayed salaries and deprived staff of designated breaks during the day.

"All in all, this is a situation where multiple types of abuse were compounded by a person at the intersection of many forms of privilege," added Hingorani.



Need for legislation against workplace harassment in Singapore​



The BooksActually case "drives home" the need for national legislation that specifically targets workplace harassment in Singapore, said Hingorani.

Legislation should go beyond the scope of existing criminal laws and the Protection from Harassment Act (POHA), as this would place a legal obligation on employers to prevent and address harassment in their workplaces, she added.



AWARE temporarily suspends partnership with BooksActually​



When asked whether AWARE would reassess its relationship with BooksActually, Hingorani said that her organisation is temporarily suspending their partnership with the book store for membership benefits.

Previously, members of AWARE would receive discounts to BooksActually's online store.

She added: "We may reassess our relationship after confirming with their new team that policies and procedures to address and prevent workplace harassment are in place."







Women with similar experiences can contact AWARE for support​



Hingorani said women who have experienced something similar to the women associated with Leck can call AWARE's Sexual Assault Care Centre (SACC).

She said: "It can be difficult to understand if something you have experienced constitutes sexual violence, especially in the face of societal pressure to 'not overreact'."

The SACC Helpline is operated by trained volunteers and staff who can help "make sense" of what these women have gone through, and help them decide on their next steps.

AWARE also runs a Workplace Harassment and Discrimination Advisory (WHDA), a free and confidential service providing advice and support -- both practical and emotional -- to individuals facing discrimination or harassment at the workplace.

The WHDA, said Hingorani, can help guide individuals through their various options, such as approaching their company's HR, the Tripartite Alliance for Fair & Progressive Employment Practices (TAFEP), or filing a mediation request with the Tripartite Alliance for Dispute Management (TADM).

According to AWARE, WHDA saw more than 100 cases involving workplace harassment, including sexual harassment and bullying in 2020.


https://mothership.sg/2021/09/aware-statement-booksactually/
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Have to admit the ChiCons have done some positive things for society as whole,,one is whacking the mudslimes,,,and the next is whacking those Femnazis

Are China's more radical feminists derailing the #MeToo movement?​

By Bang Xiao
Posted 9h ago9 hours ago
A woman reads ribbons at a wishing tree

Some radical feminists have turned many young Chinese women away from the #MeToo movement, but some say they are strong advocates for women's rights.(
Reuters: Thomas Peter
)
Help keep family & friends informed by sharing this article
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In some pockets of the Chinese internet, a woman who gets married is a "marriage donkey" and giving birth means she's a "fertility tool".
Meet China's "feminists fists" — a group of self-proclaimed extreme feminists who see men as the enemy.
In Chinese language, women's fists and women's rights are pronounced the same way, and people use this as a way to satirise radical feminists for wielding their "fists" on social media platforms.
They're also known as "rural" feminists — a term that in Chinese has a humiliating connotation, similar to the pejorative term "feminazi" in English.
The group advocates for women's rights, but sometimes their targets are women themselves, from everyday married women to those who are taking a stand against sexual harassment.

Feminists face trolling on two fronts​

A woman look into camera

Zhou Xiaoxuan, also known by her online name Xianzi, has been targeted because she doesn't identify as a feminist.(
Reuters: Tingshu Wang
)
One woman subjected to the online ire of the feminist fists is Zhou Xiaoxuan, China's most famous #MeToo figure.
Zhou had accused a well-known TV presenter of sexually harassing her when she was an intern, but earlier this month she was told by a Beijing-based court that her lawsuit was dismissed for lack of evidence.

Feminism under threat in China​

A woman in a red jumper smiling.
China's Chairman Mao said that "women hold up half the sky", but decades later, feminists in China are still fighting against subjugation.
Read more

Although she is recognised as a women's rights advocate, Zhou has made it clear that she doesn't call herself a feminist, saying she didn't want to ascribe to the label.
This provoked some extreme feminists to launch an online campaign against her, claiming she was as guilty as the man who she alleged groped her.
Chinese social media influencer Papi Jiangha is seen by many as an independent woman and has more than 30 million followers on Weibo.
But when she posted a video and disclosed her new-born baby would take his father's surname, she was soon attacked by the feminist fists and called a "marriage donkey".
The language used is often designed to humiliate women, and it can get nasty.
China women internet

China has censored feminists' accounts on social media platforms such as Weibo and Douban this year.(
Reuters: Aly Song
)
The taunts might be dismissed as sarcasm, but ordinary women are getting trolled online.
And it comes at a time when feminism and the women's equality movement is already under pressure from the Chinese state and censorship.
In April this year, several feminists had their social media accounts removed, after torrents of angry men trolled them.
Those trolls often espoused nationalistic views, saying that feminists and extreme feminists were trying to disrupt traditional Chinese society.

Where does feminism fit in Chinese culture?​

A Chinese propaganda painting in the 70s saying women hold up half the sky with several Chinese women smiling.

China's Chairman Mao famously said "women can hold up half the sky".(
Supplied
)
Chinese society has developed gender stereotypes over thousands of years of its male-dominated history.
Even today, women in some regions have not only become victims of a patriarchal society, but also its advocates.
For example, in the less developed areas of Guangdong and Fujian, there is still a preference for sons over daughters.
Traditionally, it's believed daughters cannot carry on the family line and therefore are not as valuable as sons — even in the eyes of their mothers.

What is the #MeToo campaign?​

A woman holding a sign in front of her face that says #METOO.
The social media campaign helped victims speak out and has sparked change across the entertainment industry.
Read more

For many in China, the nuances of the feminist spectrum aren't well understood outside the online world.
Like in the West, many might conflate feminism with man-hating, and paint those seeking equality with the same brush as those holding more radical views.
While there is a perception that feminism is a Western import that is contrary to the Chinese culture, feminists argue that many women are genuinely demanding more gender equality.
Chinese sexologist and sociologist Li Yinhe says the conflict between feminism and traditional Chinese society is twofold: one is a fictional conflict; the other is a real conflict.
"The fictional conflict refers to the imaginary image of feminism that people have assumed: that it is man-hating and hostile to men," she wrote on her public WeChat account in 2020.
She goes on to explain that within feminism there are different schools of thought, including more radical elements.
The real conflict, she writes, can be found in the everyday lives of Chinese people, where women are often expected to take on more of the family responsibilities and where politics are still dominated by men.

China's LGBT community​

A woman has stickers on her face and holds a metallic bag.
Members of China's LGBT community say moments like the recent cancellation of the country's largest LGBT festival are demoralising and highlights an irony where they are accepted in theory but in practice are not.
Read more

Li says China had thousands of years of male-dominated rule, and the double standard between men and women still persists.
For example, a successful man who has a mistress often attracts envy and approval from his male friends and colleagues, but this would not be seen as acceptable for a woman.
Another important factor in China's feminist movement is the gender disparity within society.
The controversial One Child policy, which has since been changed to a Three Child policy to encourage a baby boom, ultimately resulted in about 30 million more men than women in the country, due to preferences for a son.
Li believes feminism is widely supported in Chinese society; she points out the Chinese Communist Party (CCP) made equality between men and women a national policy.
Chairman Mao Zedong also famously said "women can hold up half the sky".
Li says that in mainstream Chinese discourse, the term "rights" has always been sensitive and easily associated with trouble, whether it's human rights, women's rights or civil rights.
"But among the various schools of feminism with different views and claims, there is one thing in common, and that is to advocate equality between men and women," she writes.
In Beijing's eyes, the feminist groups' challenge to a male-dominated society is also a challenge to the male-dominated government run by the CCP.
And in China, any movement that develops strength is likely to be the target of repression.

Extreme feminism is big business​

Women's rights activists in China are detained

Feminists were arrested in China along with three others for allegedly planning a protest against sexual harassment in 2015.(
Supplied
)
Some marketing firms have been capitalising on the feminist fists approach.
Among them is Ma Ling, who runs the WeChat and Weibo social media account Mimeng, which has become renowned for using this rhetoric to attract clicks for PR articles.
In one post, she suggested men should pay for their female partner's online shopping carts, telling 16 million followers on Weibo that "a man who doesn't pay off your shopping cart doesn't love you".
Its PR articles, which reportedly cost up to 680,000 yuan ($145,350) per post, are believed to have initially fuelled the conflict between netizens and feminazis online.

China's MeToo movement fights on​

Zhou Xiaoxuan said she “felt complicated” to see so many supporters waiting.
Xiaoxuan has taken one of China's biggest media stars to court over sexual harassment allegations, and she hopes to build a network to support others facing similar battles in a system where censorship and vague laws have made things difficult.
Read more

CCP mouthpiece The People's Daily commented that Mimeng's posts were boiling "toxic chicken soup" and "manipulating public sentiment".
In 2019, Chinese authorities not only censored Ma's presence on social media, but also considered her as a threat to China's social stability.
Ma's articles were popular among young Chinese women, but many were also later turned off by some of the more radical campaigns and trolling activities.
Beijing has used netizens' outrage against feminist fists to legitimise its crackdown on all feminists.
But as the crackdown and censorship continues, it's also using the same argument about threats to Chinese social order to clamp down on those fighting for women's equality.
A man on red carpet

China has cracked down on thousands of social media accounts to "purify" the internet space.(
Reuters: Jason Lee
)
Earlier this year, an unprecedented crackdown on feminists began, with dozens of feminist accounts censored on Weibo and Douban.
But despite recent setbacks, feminists say the country's #MeToo movement hasn't been defeated.
Last week, Huang Xueqin, a citizen journalist who has long followed the feminist movement in China, lost contact with her family and friends.
Her last post on Facebook gave us a glimpse of her reflections on the #MeToo movement in China.
"In the past three years, we have seen authorities' crackdown and censorship to extinguish the controversial nature of #MeToo in China, and to combat the collective voices and actions of women," Huang wrote.
"In an authoritarian and patriarchal country, we never thought that women would easily get the respect, equality and power we want.
"We have a clean conscience, we stand by our words, and we continue to move forward."
Posted 9h ago
 

borom

Alfrescian (Inf)
Asset
If women are so abused here , how come can be president and another one can lose millions with impunity and earn salary so high until become a state secret?
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
What a dick head......pun intended.

See the source image
If that is the case, Women should serve NS,,,as it is about making society more equal and accessible....NS should also be accessible to women...talk about a women with a Dick,,,,and she does look like s Dick Head
 

bobby

Alfrescian
Loyal
If that is the case, Women should serve NS,,,as it is about making society more equal and accessible....NS should also be accessible to women...talk about a women with a Dick,,,,and she does look like s Dick Head

Yalor....then also must

1) Ladies tennis Grand slam events also 5 sets...in fact no Mens & Womens, just 1 tournament.
2) No more red ladies tees for golf
3) No more Mens & Womens for all Olympics events...just 1 event.
4) In the event of cruise ship sinking...no more "ladies first" to board life boats.
 

Hypocrite-The

Alfrescian
Loyal
Yalor....then also must

1) Ladies tennis Grand slam events also 5 sets...in fact no Mens & Womens, just 1 tournament.
2) No more red ladies tees for golf
3) No more Mens & Womens for all Olympics events...just 1 event.
4) In the event of cruise ship sinking...no more "ladies first" to board life boats.
And add in . No more women's crapster..these femnazis will accept or not?
 

Scrooball (clone)

Alfrescian
Loyal
How come AWARE didn't force through legislation reforms to enforce compulsory NS for women? Are they denying Singaporean women the national privilege to do NS?

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