qatarperegrine: (niqab)
[personal profile] qatarperegrine
This is one of those days that I wish Qatari media were a bit more reliable.

Yesterday and today the Supreme Council for Family Affairs is holding a conference called "Family Violence in the Qatari Society: the Reality and Solution." I think this would be an interesting topic to know more about. I wouldn't be surprised to discover that violence against women was more prevalent here than in the States; I also wouldn't be surprised to discover the reverse. I could see explanations for either one being the case. (The statistics on reporting of domestic violence reported in The Peninsula article are quite low, but given the extreme underreporting of domestic violence I don't think that tells us much.)

The local papers do not have the level of sensitivity we Americans expect from the media (and that's saying something!), and there are a number of unfortunate newspaper passages on this conference. Here's the worst from The Peninsula:
Ameena said incidents of violence against women in Qatari families were on the rise over the past years but there was nothing alarming about it.
I suspect she said that the increase is not of alarming proportions, not that there is nothing alarming about violence against women. I hope that's what she said, anyway.

The Gulf Times reporting is, as always, even worse. While the Peninsula reports that uneducated women are more often victims of physical violence and educated women of emotional abuse, the Gulf Times headline proclaims: 'Educated' women face violence from husbands, finds researcher. The leading paragraph repeats this claim that "the more the woman is educated, the more she is subjected to family violence."

Contrary to Western myths, the Arab women I have come to know this year are strong and independent women, and by all accounts women are the strength of the Qatari family. And, again contrary to our stereotype, the advent of Islam probably did more to advance women's rights than any other single event in history. Given that, it's such a shame that the horror of violence against women isn't being explored more competently in public discourse here.
 

Re: Domestic Violence in Qatar

Date: 2005-11-27 07:02 am (UTC)
From: [identity profile] qatar.livejournal.com
Oops, I was misremembering. It blamed women not for accidents but for gridlock:

'Women to blame' for Qatar gridlock. The Peninsula's story, though I can't find it at the moment, said just about the opposite.

Re: Domestic Violence in Qatar

Date: 2005-11-27 07:50 pm (UTC)
From: (Anonymous)
Yes definitely buses full of skilled and semi skilled women labourers driven by (again) skilled or semi skilled women drivers, plus women in cruisers jumping the lanes and women trying to get through the roundabouts against the traffic flow.... Yes, of course I remember them. I am one of these women!

=^..^=
http://qatarcat.blogspot.com

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