Berliner Boersenzeitung - World rallies for Women's Day under Ukraine war shadow

EUR -
AED 4.228439
AFN 81.735338
ALL 97.888339
AMD 444.665833
ANG 2.060567
AOA 1055.831738
ARS 1340.843255
AUD 1.775314
AWG 2.072516
AZN 1.955039
BAM 1.955168
BBD 2.326048
BDT 140.894429
BGN 1.954158
BHD 0.434311
BIF 3430.790354
BMD 1.151398
BND 1.480053
BOB 7.960425
BRL 6.313231
BSD 1.152027
BTN 99.733742
BWP 15.527315
BYN 3.770262
BYR 22567.392859
BZD 2.314152
CAD 1.579234
CDF 3312.570769
CHF 0.941504
CLF 0.028236
CLP 1083.557507
CNY 8.276825
CNH 8.262815
COP 4701.15638
CRC 581.611885
CUC 1.151398
CUP 30.512036
CVE 110.229348
CZK 24.829844
DJF 205.153646
DKK 7.460055
DOP 68.317903
DZD 149.826141
EGP 58.334982
ERN 17.270964
ETB 158.421261
FJD 2.594446
FKP 0.857319
GBP 0.853727
GEL 3.131611
GGP 0.857319
GHS 11.866162
GIP 0.857319
GMD 82.328434
GNF 9981.771521
GTQ 8.854328
GYD 241.022044
HKD 9.038339
HNL 30.088268
HRK 7.530027
HTG 151.204378
HUF 402.553357
IDR 18888.044275
ILS 4.002402
IMP 0.857319
INR 99.749018
IQD 1509.211864
IRR 48502.623972
ISK 142.969556
JEP 0.857319
JMD 183.656181
JOD 0.816366
JPY 167.656729
KES 148.898539
KGS 100.690068
KHR 4617.606754
KMF 492.225637
KPW 1036.211911
KRW 1573.333001
KWD 0.352569
KYD 0.96011
KZT 602.028353
LAK 24854.960974
LBP 103222.813872
LKR 346.195544
LRD 230.410479
LSL 20.800724
LTL 3.399778
LVL 0.696469
LYD 6.279969
MAD 10.515219
MDL 19.809593
MGA 5148.334835
MKD 61.494014
MMK 2417.154852
MNT 4126.186795
MOP 9.314989
MRU 45.540259
MUR 52.526913
MVR 17.737284
MWK 1997.653884
MXN 21.913894
MYR 4.896321
MZN 73.64331
NAD 20.800272
NGN 1785.991013
NIO 42.396287
NOK 11.59439
NPR 159.574388
NZD 1.92305
OMR 0.442728
PAB 1.152027
PEN 4.136962
PGK 4.816589
PHP 65.825718
PKR 326.891271
PLN 4.264972
PYG 9195.025984
QAR 4.201741
RON 5.029304
RSD 117.192684
RUB 90.32753
RWF 1663.612496
SAR 4.320408
SBD 9.603149
SCR 16.895739
SDG 691.415468
SEK 11.124084
SGD 1.479281
SHP 0.904818
SLE 25.849024
SLL 24144.236084
SOS 658.387053
SRD 44.732049
STD 23831.605551
SVC 10.08074
SYP 14970.250492
SZL 20.796725
THB 37.753938
TJS 11.37642
TMT 4.029892
TND 3.410297
TOP 2.696685
TRY 45.68577
TTD 7.829468
TWD 33.993869
TZS 3044.055803
UAH 48.285051
UGX 4152.656875
USD 1.151398
UYU 47.104765
UZS 14468.320403
VES 118.083541
VND 30084.292057
VUV 138.24116
WST 3.16751
XAF 655.759141
XAG 0.031979
XAU 0.000344
XCD 3.111709
XDR 0.816717
XOF 655.744908
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.441513
ZAR 20.717264
ZMK 10363.96245
ZMW 26.641383
ZWL 370.749556
  • CMSC

    0.0900

    22.314

    +0.4%

  • CMSD

    0.0250

    22.285

    +0.11%

  • RBGPF

    0.0000

    69.04

    0%

  • SCS

    0.0400

    10.74

    +0.37%

  • RELX

    0.0300

    53

    +0.06%

  • RIO

    -0.1400

    59.33

    -0.24%

  • GSK

    0.1300

    41.45

    +0.31%

  • NGG

    0.2700

    71.48

    +0.38%

  • BP

    0.1750

    30.4

    +0.58%

  • BTI

    0.7150

    48.215

    +1.48%

  • BCC

    0.7900

    91.02

    +0.87%

  • JRI

    0.0200

    13.13

    +0.15%

  • VOD

    0.0100

    9.85

    +0.1%

  • BCE

    -0.0600

    22.445

    -0.27%

  • RYCEF

    0.1000

    12

    +0.83%

  • AZN

    -0.1200

    73.71

    -0.16%

World rallies for Women's Day under Ukraine war shadow
World rallies for Women's Day under Ukraine war shadow

World rallies for Women's Day under Ukraine war shadow

Protesters took to the streets worldwide for International Women's Day Tuesday with rallies in Pakistan defying security warnings and demonstrations in Europe urging solidarity with war-torn Ukraine.

Text size:

Despite the marches, all eyes were on the unending stream of women and children pouring out of Ukraine following Russia's invasion, sparking Europe's fastest-growing refugee crisis since World War II.

With more than two million people forced into exile, few of those arriving in the Polish border city of Przemysl could spare a thought to mark the date although one lone priest could be seen wandering through the train station with an armful of tulips, handing them out to the arriving women.

"It's very important today in this difficult place that someone speak to them saying they're very important," said Franciscan friar Kordian Szwarc as he handed out the red and yellow tulips.

"We know their men are very, very far from here and there's nobody to tell them they're important and beautiful," he told AFP.

"It's the first time it feels like a special day!" said Lilia Kysil, a 22-year-old student from Kyiv, a huge smile on her face as she stood with her mother and sister, thanking him.

At some checkpoints in war-torn Kyiv, volunteer soldiers were also handing out tulips to women passersby, an AFP correspondent said.

Meanwhile in Brussels, protesters held a "Women stand with Ukraine" rally, holding up a vast blue-and-yellow Ukrainian flag, an AFP correspondent said.

And in Paris, several thousands marched against gender violence and for equal pay in a rally headlined: "the feminist groundswell for equality".

Ahead of the rally, organisers read out a letter from Russian feminists urging women's rights activists around the world to "take a stand against the war", saying it brought out both "the violence of bullets but also sexual violence".

- Thousands rally in Pakistan -

In Pakistan, some 2,000 women rallied in the eastern city of Lahore despite official efforts to bar the protest and withdraw security for an event frequently targeted by violence.

In a jovial atmosphere, they marched through the streets, chanting "Give respect to women" and "End the patriarchy" as another 1,000 women rallied in Karachi, Pakistan's largest city, and 200 in the capital, Islamabad.

Such rallies have triggered a fierce backlash since they began four years ago in deeply conservative and patriarchal Pakistan where women have been shot, stabbed, stoned, burnt and strangled for damaging family "honour".

Critics say they are promoting liberal Western values and disrespecting religious and cultural mores, and two years ago Islamist hardliners stoned the women as they marched through Islamabad.

Meanwhile, Afghanistan marked the day in muted fashion with activists cowed by the threat of arrest by the country's Taliban rulers who swept back to power in August, rolling back decades of advances for women.

Squeezed out of government employment, they can no longer travel alone and must dress according to a strict interpretation of the Koran.

"If you care about women’s rights -- anywhere in the world -- you should be watching Afghanistan with deep alarm," Heather Barr, of Human Rights Watch told AFP on Tuesday.

- Turkey women rally against femicide -

In Turkey, protesters have spent days preparing banners ahead of the main march in Istanbul later on Tuesday to protest against femicide and urge Ankara to rejoin a Europe-wide treaty protecting women from violence.

Last year, 416 women were killed in Turkey, while this year's toll currently stands at 72, figures from the We Will Stop Femicide platform show.

There has been a groundswell of protest after Turkey's withdrawal last year from the Istanbul Convention that lays out a legal framework to tackle, prevent and prosecute violence against women.

Ankara justified the withdrawal by saying the 2011 treaty had a hidden agenda to normalise homosexuality.

And in Kenya, 150 people marched through the capital Nairobi calling for an end to gender-based violence after a woman was viciously attacked by motorcycle taxi drivers.

The incident occurred after a road accident on Friday, with a viral video showing the men grabbing at the young woman's clothes as she screamed inside her car.

The protesters marched to police headquarters, waving banners reading "Hear my scream" and urging an end to gender-based violence.

Police arrested 16 people in connection with the assault.

burs-hmw/mg/yad

(F.Schuster--BBZ)