Cypriot women work on lesser terms than men, part-time, fixed contracts, and under unregulated conditions of cheap labour, Peo union general-secretary Sotiroulla Charalambous said on Tuesday in an address to mark International Womens Day.
Various events were being held islandwide with statements being issued by parties, government officials and organisations focused on the adverse effects both the war in Ukraine and the pandemic have had on women.
In her speech at the public event in Nicosia, Charalambous, the first woman to head up the Akel-affiliated trade union, and a former labour minister said the day should not be limited to declarations and wishes but must become part of the need to get rid of all forms of discrimination and exploitation, part of the struggle for a fairer, more humane world.
March 8, she added, brings together working men and women from all over the world and this year was being marked under the shadow of the Ukraine war and amid a two-year ongoing pandemic.
Today, on this important day for workers, the day that we honour the struggles of generations of women and men against discrimination, for equality, she said.
This struggle concerns us all, it is a struggle for work with dignity and rights, it is a struggle for bread. The militarisation and escalation of armaments cannot be the solution. On the contrary, it aggravates the situation.
Charalambous said that according to date from the European Institute for Gender Equality published on February 11, while Cyprus ranks 8th out of 27 in the index for womens participation in work, on the index for segregation and quality of work, the island came in 21st place.
This means, he pointed out, that the woman of Cyprus work but they work on lesser terms, with unregulated forms of work, with part-time work, with fixed-term contracts, and en masse as cheap labour, Charalambous added.
Gender Equality Commissioner Iosifina Antoniou, in her statement said Womens Day was not a time for complacency.
In addition to the threat of war and the humanitarian crisis that overshadows the entire planet, gender equality had been adversely affected by the prolonged crisis resulting from the pandemic.
Violence against women, unemployment, poverty, social exclusion, discrimination and inequalities experienced daily by women are some of the challenges that women face, she said.
Today is not a day for complacency. Its a day of debt relief for a fairer and more equal society for all women. We must give women and girls hope for a better tomorrow, which can only be achieved by providing equal opportunities for access to all areas of life: education, work, health, justice, power.
Justice Minister Stephie Dracou said the government viewed gender equality issues and measures to address them as a priority and was focused on what still needed to be done.
Dracou listed programmes already being implemented to reduce unemployment, empower women financially, reconcile personal, family and professional life, reduce the pay gap, achieve balanced participation in decision-making, eliminate legislative discrimination, gender stereotypes.
The minister also highlighted efforts towards preventing violence against women through the national coordinating body for the Istanbul Convention, interdisciplinary cooperation of relevant services, and in parallel with the important services offered by the recently-opened Womens House shelter, the network of support, protection and empowerment of victims of gender-based violence will be further strengthened.
Changes have also taken place in the way the victims of sexual violence are handled by the police, and we are ready to support any effort that focuses on women victims and their rights, she said.
Meanwhile, Cyprus first woman House President, Annita Demetriou invited nine young girls to parliament to mark the day.
For us it is not a day to celebrate, it is a day to remind ourselves how many things we still have to do, she said.
Addressing the nine girls, the Speaker called them our hope for the future.
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