Year: 2010

Kanwaljit Soin 27th in CNN Go’s Power List


AWARE stalwart Kanwaljit Soin was one of few women named in the list of “personalities who have helped engineer this country’s DNA”. The article entitled The Power List: 30 People Who Have Shaped Singapore appeared on CNN Go, the network’s online travel portal, in October.

The story said Soin, AWARE president from 1991 to 1993, was “a much-needed female presence” in parliament and one of the most well-known names in Singapore’s women’s rights movement. Soin’s greatest contribution to Singapore – her work resulting in the introduction of Personal Protection Orders for victims of domestic abuse – was sadly not mentioned.

She came in three places ahead of “power couple” Mr and Mrs Lee Kuan Yew, but was beaten to the number spot by – wait for it – Makansutra’s KF Seetoh. Go figure.

Whatever the case, the AWARE team is glad to see such a champion of women’s issues like Kanwaljit being recognised for her work. Congrats from all of us!

Women’s Rights are Human Rights

AWARE contributes to human rights submission to UN by local NGOs

Universal Periodic Review
Universal Periodic Review

A loose and informal grouping of local civil society organisation, including AWARE, has made a 10-page submission to the United Nation’s Human Rights Council as part of the Universal Periodic Review (UPR) process.

This process, launched by the UN in 2006, involves a review of the human rights record of all UN member states once every four years. It provides an opportunity for all States to declare what actions they have taken to improve the human rights situations in their countries and to overcome challenges to the enjoyment of human rights. The review covers the five categories of human rights – civil, political, social, cultural and economic.

Singapore will be up for review in May 2011. After the civil society stakeholders submit their reports, the Government will subsequently issue its report. The materials are then considered by a working group of the Council and points are discussed with the state and other parties, after which a report and recommendations will be made.

The UPR is similar to the CEDAW (Convention on the Elimination of all forms of Discrimination Against Women) process, except that the UPR deals with all aspects of human rights . AWARE has been involved in the CEDAW process since 2004.

CEDAW is one of several human rights review processes initiated by the UN, with the UPR serving as an over-arching mechanism. The aim of the UPR, says the UN, is to remind states “of their responsibility to fully respect and implement all human rights and fundamental freedoms”.

Women’s rights are, of course, an important part of human rights. Since AWARE is already a participant in the UN human rights process through CEDAW, taking part in the coalition of Singapore NGOs for UPR was a logical next step.

On women’s rights, the UPR submission points out that while progress has been made there remain areas where women in Singapore face discrimination and other obstacles. It notes that Article 12 (2) of Singapore’s Constitution prohibits discrimination on certain grounds but excludes gender.

The recommendations made in the submission on women’s rights include:

  • repeal the partial marital rape immunity that remains in force in the Penal Code
  • amend Article 12(2) of the Constitution, to bar discrimination on the grounds of gender and sexuality
  • implement stronger protections for pregnant women against discriminatory employment practices
  • offer citizenship as of right to foreign women who are married to Singaporean men
  • update Singapore’s definition of trafficking to conform to international norms
  • review the application of inheritance laws to Muslim women.

The first four-year UPR cycle began in 2008. In the follow-up reviews during the second UPR cycle, from 2012 to 2015, the focus will be on the implementation of the recommendations made during the first cycle.

The civil society organisations that made the submission, apart from AWARE, are: Challenged People’s Alliance and Network (CAN!); Deaf and Hard of Hearing Federation; Humanitarian Organization for Migration Economics; MARUAH (Working Group for an ASEAN Human Rights Mechanism, Singapore); People Like Us; Singaporeans for Democracy; and Transient Workers Count Too. MARUAH coordinated the effort

The UPR Report submitted by the civil society organisations can be downloaded from MARUAH’s website at http://maruah.org/

For more information about the UPR: Basic Facts.

Key Documents:

In The News:

 

What is the UPR?

 

CNA Report on Press Conference

Ignite – Share, Learn, Interact!

Update:

IGNITE STARTS AT 12:30PM SHARP!!!
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Ingite - The Un Conference

Come join us at Ignite the exciting unconference conference that’s a part of the festivities at Celebrate! AWARE’s 25th Birthday Party.

Ignite is an “un-conference” – A gathering of people who get together to openly exchange ideas. This unstructured, participative format is based on BARCAMP which has been globally successful particularly in tech culture.

Please note that due to licensing restrictions on public events, only Singaporeans are allowed to speak.

Now we are bringing it to Singapore’s civil society.

Barcamp is an ad-hoc gathering born from the desire for people to share and learn in an open environment. It is an intense event with discussions, demos and interaction from participants who are the main actors of the event. – Barcamp.org

Register for Event
So how does it work?

  • Participants show up on the day.
  • Participants who would like to speak put up their proposed topics on the wall, and everyone votes on what they want to hear.
  • The most popular topics are scheduled in first; less popular topics may not get scheduled and may be moved to lightning talks at the end of the day where each speaker gets 5 minutes to present.
  • Others are welcome to participate in the lightning talks too.
Vote on topics of interest to you
Popular topics are scheduled

 

  • There are slots of 30 minutes each to accommodate the talk and Q&A
  • Participants are welcome to enter and exit the rooms freely depending on their interest in the talk.
  • Participants are encourage to ask questions! The point of the conference is to encourage and exchange and sharing of information
  • There will usually be more than one talk going on at once (we have 2 rooms).
  • Later in the day, time slots may be used for lightening talks (talks of 5 minutes each).
IGNITE!
Saturday November 27th at 12:30pm sharp!
AWARE Centre
Block 5 Dover Crescent #01-22
Singapore 130005
map

Who is allowed to participate?
Everybody. This is for the entire community. There are no restrictions on participation.

What are the talks about?

  • Anything and everything
  • Whatever you are passionate about
  • Community, arts, tech, finance, sports … Did we mention everything and anything?
  • Your talk can even just be a question – a conversation starter to engage all participants
  • During the course of the event, you may even decide… Hey I want to give a talk! You can then put your topic on the board and see if there is interest.
  • Prizes will be given out for participation and for the best talks (details to follow)
Why is tuition a booming industry in Singapore?
Rehoming and Sterilization of Cats
How I got out of debt
Introduction to ACRES and its work
How young is too young for Facebook?
Information Overload!

Anything Else?

  • Ignite is being held as part of AWARE’s 25th Brithday celebrations
  • This means there will be lots of food and activities going on outside the centre for you to enjoy when you are not listening to a talk
  • We will list talks here for speakers who have announced their topics in advance.

Please Sign Up

Help us gauge numbers…

Register for Event

 

Vote on Topics

The final vote will be held on the day. But here’s a taste of some of the topics that have been offered. We will keep adding to this list as more topics are submitted.

[poll id=”3″]

Women’s Charter: AWARE Calls For Changes

Family Court StatueMedia release

AWARE welcomes the proposed amendments to the Women’s Charter but calls for a slew of adjustments and additions to strengthen the legislation and ensure greater compliance with its provisions.

The key recommendation is that a central body be set up to administer maintenance payments and facilitate the collection of outstanding payments, with powers to access information from government databases.

Adding its voice to other calls that have been made for such an agency, AWARE said in its submission to the Ministry of Community Development, Youth and Sports (MCYS): “The proposed enhancements do not address one of the greatest weaknesses of the present system, namely, the onerous burden on the under-resourced claimant to go to Court repeatedly to enforce defaults in maintenance payments.”

The many trips to the Court “wear down the claimant and cause her to give up a right enshrined in the Women’s Charter and granted by Court. The claimant, often a single mum struggling to maintain her job and take care of her children, cannot afford to keep taking time off work. The current changes do not take away this problem.”

AWARE said it was making its recommendations on the strength of:
• its many years of helping women via a crisis helpline, counselling service and legal clinic
• the professional experience of several family lawyers amongst its active volunteers
• its monitoring of trends in gender and family matters.

Call it ‘Family Charter’ instead

A second strong recommendation is that the Women’s Charter be renamed ‘Family Charter’ as its provisions cover “every conceivable aspect of marital and family law – registration and dissolution of marriages, division of matrimonial assets, maintenance provisions and the welfare of children. Thus, the Family Charter is a more accurate name for this important piece of legislation.”

The name “Women’s Charter” gives the impression that this is a statute that protects women against men and that men have less rights than women in Singapore.

“This misconception,” AWARE said, “may contribute towards the acrimony in a divorce as the husband, feeling that the system is against him (because it is governed by the Women’s Charter), retaliates against his wife and children by not paying maintenance.”

Pre-marriage counselling for foreign brides

Another call by AWARE is for the proposed mandatory marriage preparatory course for certain groups, such as minors, to be extended to couples where one party is a foreign citizen who does not speak English. The primary target here is an intended marriage between a Singaporean male and a less educated foreign bride from the region, often brokered by a third party matchmaking agency and entered into very quickly.

In such cases there can be significant cultural and language differences between the spouses and this can lead to problems. A foreign wife who is in Singapore on a social visit pass is especially vulnerable when the marriage sours because she is completely dependent on her Singaporean husband.

AWARE’s helpline has handled many cases of foreign wives forced to leave their children in Singapore when their Singaporean husband decided, unilaterally, that the marriage was over and refused to renew his spouse’s social visit pass. His wife is thus forced to leave Singapore, leaving the children of such marriages suddenly without a mother.

Requiring such couples to attend a marriage preparatory course would help ensure that foreign spouses-to-be are clear about their immigration status, while also helping both parties better understand each other’s expectations in marriage.

Other recommendations made by AWARE include:

Enforcement of maintenance

a) Require divorcees planning to remarry to declare any maintenance order on them, and not just if they are in arrears on such an order, so prospective spouses are aware of this financial obligation
b) Provide for late interest on maintenance arrears to encourage prompt payments
c) With habitual defaulters, allow access to the defaulter’s CPF to pay for the arrears in child maintenance payments
d) Allow, in appropriate cases and where it is just and equitable, for maintenance for husbands, such as when he is sick or incapacitated

Divorce Time Frames

With the trend being for people to marry later, the time bar for the filing of divorce writs should be shortened. This is so that when a first marriage does not work out, the couple can end the marriage more quickly and thus each be able to try and find another partner and start a family before they get too old.

AWARE has therefore called for the time bar for seeking divorce to be reduced from three to two years, with similar reductions in the time frames for desertion and separation situations.

AWARE President Nicole Tan said the recommendations had been drawn up after much thought and deliberation, with much input from both the counselling staff and the family lawyers among the organisation’s members, and she hoped the authorities would give due consideration to all the points.

“The Women’s Charter was a progressive document when it was first enacted,” she said. “Fifty years have passed and it is timely to update this important legislation to take into account emerging social trends such as the increase of trans-border marriages and the increased median age of marriage for both women and men.”
Dowloads:

  • Copies of AWARE’s submission to MCYS can be downloaded here.
  • Download the media release here.

For more information, please contact:

Corinna Lim, Executive Director
ed@aware.org.sg

Celebrate! Flea, Fun & Food Fair

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It’s our 25th birthday bash and you’re invited to our place for some fun-filled, family-friendly revelry.

We’ve planned a full day of exciting activities including performances by songbird Inch Chua and rocksters Lunarin; tasty bites, handicrafts and vintage clothes stalls at our flea market; Interactive art projects – all done on the day itself by you, our guests; as well as Ignite an exciting user-generated “conference” inspired by BarCamp.

So come join us to celebrate women, celebrate how far we’ve come and celebrate 25 fabulous years of working together for gender equality!

WHEN: Saturday November 27th, 12 noon to 8pm.

Single Post ItWHERE:
AWARE Centre. Open space outside Block 5, Dover Crescent.
Click here for a map

WHY: Because 25 years is worth celebrating!

AWARE needs volunteers pre-event as well as on the day itself. Read more here and email intern@aware.org.sg to be a part of this exciting day

The Bra-Burning Myth

Did you know that no lingerie was harmed in the name of feminism? The inaccurate stereotype first came about in 1968 when a group of women protested the objectification of women at the Miss America contest in Atlantic City.

In one of a series of performances, they tossed girdles, bras and tweezers into a “freedom trashcan” – a critique on the ideals that corseted women into narrow definitions of beauty and valued us solely for our looks. The protestors proposed setting the contents of the trashcan ablaze, but were stopped by police.

Journalists covering the story branded the women “bra-burners” and the sensationalist monicker spread like, ahem, wildfire, even though it was completely inaccurate.

For some, even now, it’s easier to crack jokes about people whose viewpoints threaten the status quo than to engage in actual debate. Unfortunately, the nickname – a classic way of caricaturing womens’ liberation activists and triviliasing the seriousness of the issue – stuck. So, dispel the myth next time someone calls you a bra-burner. And if that fails, try telling them to “shut up and sit down”.

Do you have any other trivia about feminism, women or gender? Send your ideas to media@aware.org.sg

I Like It In My Status Update… Or  do I?

I’m all for witty wordplay and cyber-citizens amusing themselves with how far they’re able to push puns on their status updates, but the Facebook breast cancer campaign that recently went viral, is frankly, just annoying.

I guess we should be grateful that we aren’t using ads like Save the Boobs, (a blatant objectification of women’s breasts in the name of cancer awareness so bawdy YouTube makes you register online to prove you’re above 18). But really, is there value in reducing the issue of an illness that will afflict roughly 1.3 million women wordwide and take the lives of approximately 465,000 to a spate of clever sexual innuendos on Facebook?

In case you missed the memo, a viral campaign that took Facebook in the first two weeks of October, had women cryptically changing their status updates to “I like it on the couch” or “I like in on the washing machine” or “I like it on the kitchen counter/dining table/piano stool.”

What they’re actually talking about is where they like to put their bags when they get home. Of course. And somehow, like a similar, but less sexually suggestive campaign that came earlier, this was supposed to lead to a more heightened awareness of breast cancer. The question of course is: Did it? No. And I’m not the only one who thinks so.

Digital marketing expert Natasha Fernandez works on the Interactive team at Turner Entertainment Networks Asia (CNN and Cartoon Network). She says that while the campaign engaged thousands on Facebook and got a lot of press for very little cost, the campaign otherwise fell flat.

“It was a very clever way to pique the public’s interest but it seemed to be weak in follow-through,” she told AWARE. “If the objective was to encourage women to get breast screenings, then this information needed to be tied into the mechanics somehow. [Such as to] get users to post the breast cancer awareness URL.”

The campaign made no link (pun intended) to information on the disease, to encouraging regular breast-self-examinations, or to emphasising the importance of regular mammograms. That lack of educational value is where “I like it” gets very dislikeable.

With no educational, financial or humanitarian benefit, it’s hard to see what the “I like it” campaign is actually doing for breast cancer. Is generating buzz about breast cancer enough to move women to get examined? Is it possible to create an effective campaign that does not resort to sexual innuendos? Surely there is a way to engage the public on this important issue that doesn’t trivialise the experiences of those who have survived, died from, or witnessed cancer.

Why, our very own Breast Cancer Foundation of Singapore did this perfectly with their recent print ad campaign which asked: “Are you obsessed with the right things?” referring to a woman’s tendency to be more concerned about her appearance than her health. The ads, which included a bare-breasted woman covered in body-paint, conveyed this message creatively without objectifying the body or its nakedness.

Now that kind of campaign – clever in its delivery but austere in its message – that’s an approach that I like anywhere at all. – Tania De Rozario

For information about breast cancer, how to prevent it and how you can get involved, log onto the Breast Cancer Foundation at  www.bcf.org.sg

SQ Pregnancy Payout: AWARE’s Response

Singapore Airlines is now giving cabin crew who become pregnant an ex-gratia payout – amounting to two months’ salary.

The company’s policy, which requires pregnant female flight attendants to resign, has been criticised for being discriminatory and unfair.

Crew who are expecting a child receive no maternity benefits, however they can later re-apply to work for the airline as ground staff.

An October 14th Straits Times article entitled Payout for Pregnant SIA Crew reads:

“The Association of Women for Action and Research (Aware), which had earlier described the airline’s approach as ‘unfair’, softened its stance yesterday, saying it was ‘definitely a step in the right direction’. Still, it called for the airline to eventually remove its requirement for pregnant crew to quit flying.”

This is AWARE’s official statement on the latest development, as sent to ST journalist, Sandra Leong.


We are glad to hear of Singapore Airline’s decision to award two months salary to flight attendants who become pregnant. This is definitely a step in the right direction by SIA.

We hope that SIA will eventually remove the requirement for female attendants to quit flying when they are pregnant. Other airlines, such as British Airways, Cathay Pacific and Lufthansa have found it feasible to offer their female attendants alternative employment during pregnancy and SIA as a world class airline should not treat its employees any less favourably in this aspect.

We also hope that MCYS will treat the appeals by SIA female attendants for a further 2 months payment favourably. Ordinary Singaporean women who work in other fields do not lose their jobs when they become pregnant, and receive full maternity benefits. As it is, these female attendants are at a disadvantage compared to them. At the very least, they should receive the full 4 months payment that other Singaporean female employees would have received under more standard employment contracts as required by Singapore law.

We further hope that MCYS will discourage or expressly prohibit the use of clauses which require employees to resign when they are pregnant in order to remain in line with national policy and treat female members of staff fairly and supportively.

Roundtable Discussion: Violence Against Women in Singapore


AWARE’S popular Roundtable discussions continue with a presentation of a new study on violence against women in Singapore. Come and listen to Chan Wing Cheong, Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law, NUS.

Existing data do not give a full picture of the extent of violence against women in Singapore or the victims’ profile. The present study is the first full scale attempt to uncover the prevalence and types of violence against women in Singapore through a random sampling of Singapore households. Socio-demographic highlights of those women who experienced violence in the last 12 months will be presented at this discussion.

It is hoped that this study will contribute to policy evaluation of Singapore’s efforts to curb violence against women and lead to cross cultural analyses with other parts of the world.

Speaker: Chan Wing Cheong, Associate Professor at the Faculty of Law, NUS
Chair: Dana Lam, president of AWARE

When: 7:30 PM on November 11th
Where: at Aware, see details here.

Register here