| Women's
    Share of the Work Increases. [Australia]
 Women hold 45 per cent of all jobs in the
    country for the first time after grabbing the majority of the full-time positions created
    this year. Women have taken 56 per cent, or 57,900, of the 104,300 full-time jobs
    generated by the economy since December. Some of these new positions involve women moving
    up from part-time to full-time hours, with the number of women with part-time work falling
    by 5600 over the same period. The employment boom contains two biases - towards women
    generally, and towards managers and professionals in particular. Previous data confirms
    that two out of every three new jobs are in management or the professions. The employment
    cake is being redivided in favour of women working full-time and part-time, and at the
    expense of men in full-time jobs. Yesterday's labour force figures show male full-time
    workers held 46.9 per cent of all positions. A decade ago, they held 50.5 per cent. Women
    working full-time had 24.6 per cent of the jobs last month, and women working part-time a
    further 20.4 per cent. Together they make up 45 per cent of the employment cake for the
    first time since detailed monthly records were kept. | 
  
    | Childcare
    Tax Exemptions Draw Women to Work. [Australia] Childcare tax exemptions would attract
    more women back into the workforce, according to a survey by the Institute of Chartered
    Accountants (ICA). The national survey of 1,597 people revealed that 82 per cent of
    respondents believed the deductibility of childcare, or childcare as a fringe benefits tax
    exemption, would encourage more women back into work. The survey also found 53.8 per cent
    of respondents would consider going back to work full-time if childcare costs were made
    tax deductible. A further 62 per cent would consider working full-time if their employer
    could cover the cost of childcare as part of a salary package. 
ICA chief executive Graham
    Meyer said despite the efforts of business to make the workplace more flexible, the
    federal government could do more to encourage women back into the workforce, including
    using "tax-based" solutions. "While the institute welcomes the government's
    commitment to create an additional 25,000 childcare places, more still needs to be done
    with tax-based solutions that will give more women the choice of returning to the
    workforce," Mr Meyer said in a statement. Childcare tax concessions would also help
    in solving Australia's 
skills shortage, he said.  | 
  
    | All Female Bench a
    Legal First. [Australia] 
History was to
be made in the South Australian legal system
    this week when an all-female bench sits in the state's Court of Criminal Appeal.
    Thursday's court hearing will be the first time an all-female bench has sat for a matter
    to be heard by three judges in SA courts. The
    presiding judge will be Justice Margaret Nyland, who will be joined by justices Ann
    Vanstone and Robyn Layton.  | 
  
    | Female
    Inmates to Test 'Model' Prison. [Australia] Ladies first. The maiden section of the
    new Risdon Prison has opened and female inmates will be the first to test the promises of
    politicians. Inmates will move into the 15-bed maximum security women's prison this week.
    Director of Prisons Graeme Barber said the Mary Hutchinson Women's Prison would improve
    conditions for staff and inmates. "This is history," he said. "We begin to
    move from an archaic prison that was outmoded when first commissioned into a new,
    state-of-the-art correctional environment.  | 
  
    | 'Sexy Dress' Banned For Female
    Officers. [China] 
Female officers in Communication Department of eastern Chinese province
    of Zhejiang, are not allowed to wear 
sexy dress when they are on duty, a Zhejiang
    newspaper reported Thursday. Their male counterpart will not be allowed to grow beards and
    go shirtless, report said. An official from department informed about this decision and
    revealed these rules are necessary to build up a more serious and sincere government
    image. "If officers dress too casually, it will be inharmonious with the atmosphere
    and professionalism of a government department," the official said.  | 
  
    | Women
    Boxers Challenge Stereotypes. [China] In
 China, where women used 
to have their feet
    broken and bound to make them more attractive to men, women's boxing is growing in
    popularity and few people are batting an eyelid. In an unkempt gymnasium in 
northern Shanghai,
    some 30 boys in their late teens and early 20s pair off to jockey on mats before taking
    turns to fight in the ring. At the other end of the room, eight women and girls are doing
    the same. "I've only been boxing for half a year," said Ying Yueqi, a
    16-year-old girl from China's 
Zhejiang province 
who wants to turn professional when she is
    older.  | 
  
    | Women Give Birth
    in HK for Residential Right. [Hong Kong] Many pregnant women on the Chinese mainland
    are traveling to Hong Kong to give birth, lured by the residential right endowed to their
    babies, Beijing Morning Post reported today. According to Hong Kong's immigration
    department, infants will receive a Hong Kong identity if the parents can provide a birth
    certificate from a local hospital and their own valid identity certificates, no matter
    where they are issued, on the mainland or in Hong Kong. One out of every three women who
    give birth in public hospitals in Hong Kong is from the mainland, said the local hospital
    authority. Some underground agencies in Shenzhen, neighboring city of Hong Kong, are
    taking advantage of the regulation, arranging pregnant women to give birth in Hong Kong.
    These women are usually approached by the agencies while they are visiting the city's
    maternal and child health hospitals for check-ups. The woman will be charged tens of
    thousand of yuan for the service along with accommodation and traffic expenses during her
    stay in Hong Kong. She also has to pay the hospital bills there.   | 
  
    | Women Caught in a More
    Radical Country. [Indonesia] To 
a passer-by, the dress and demeanor of Lilis Lindawati
    would have attracted little attention as she waited in the dark in this busy industrial
    city for a ride home. She wore green pants, a denim jacket, beige sandals with modest
    heels, burgundy lipstick and penciled eyebrows. Her black hair flowed freely, unencumbered
    by a head scarf, the sign of a religious Muslim woman that is increasingly 
prevalent in Indonesia
    but not mandatory. In a now widely recounted incident, Lindawati, 36, was hustled into a
    government van that clammy February evening by brown-uniformed police, known as
    tranquility and public order officers. "They put about 20 of us in the police station
    and then went out again to target the hotels," she said, telling the story as she sat
    on the floor of her family's two-room, $12-a-month rental, her husband beside her. She was
    charged with being a prostitute under a new local law forbidding lewd behavior, and in an
    unusual public hearing attended by local dignitaries and residents, she was sentenced with
    some of the other women to three days in jail. Lindawati insists she is not a prostitute.
    Her case has become a symbol of an increasingly impassioned tussle in 
Indonesia between
    those who favor the introduction of Shariah, or Islamic law, by local governments, and
    those who assert that this large Muslim country, recognized for its moderation and
    diversity, must hold firm to its secular Constitution of 1945. | 
  
    | 2005 Birth Rate
    Hits Record Low. [Japan] 
Japan's birth rate 
in 2005 dropped to a record low of 1.25
    babies per woman, the Health Ministry reported Thursday, adding to concerns over the
    country's aging population and its economy. Japan also reported a negative birth rate for
    the first time on record, with the number of deaths in 2005 exceeding births by 21,408.
    The trend threatens to leave Japan 
with a labor shortage, erode the country's tax base and
    strain the pension system as fewer taxpayers support an expanding elderly population. The
    drop in births, despite government efforts to encourage couples to have more children,
    also reflects changing lifestyles. Many women are foregoing or delaying marriage to pursue
    career opportunities. | 
  
    | Female Employment
    Rate Hits Record High. [Korea] 
Female employment in Korea reached 
its highest level
    ever last month, indicating the role of women in the national economy is growing rapidly.
    The National Statistical Office (NSO) said Thursday that the number of employed females in
    Korea 
amounted to an all-time high of 9.9 million last month, up 2 percent from 9.7
    million a year earlier and higher than the previous record of 9.77 million in October
    2005. The female employment rate reached 49.8 percent in May, meaning nearly half of 
Koreas
    female population aged 15 years and above are earning wages. The rate rose 0.5 of a
    percentage point from 49.3 percent a year earlier. The female unemployment rate dropped to
    2.7 percent in May from 3.3 percent a year earlier, staying at its lowest level since the
    2.5 percent seen in December 2002, the NSO said. Meanwhile, the number of male employees
    in Korea inched 
up 0.7 percent year-on-year
to 13.59 million in May. The male employment
    rate dropped 0.4 percent year-on-year to 72.1 percent in May from 72.5 percent a year ago.
    The agency said recent hikes in economic participation by women reflect higher female
    education and a change in public perception toward women in the workplace.  | 
  
    | Female
    'Alongs' (Loan Sharks) Just as Ruthless. [Malaysia]  Women are now muscling in on
    the loan shark trade, and they certainly dont believe in the soft approach. This is
    what housewife Liew Nyit Nom and her family recently discovered, when they were given a
    hard time by a mother and daughter along team. The housewife, 62, and her
    66-year-old husband Chang Eng Tang, a bus driver, have been harassed and threatened by
    seven different loan sharks including the two aggressive women since November last year.
    The couple from Kulai, Johor, claim their problems began when their married daughter
    borrowed money from various loan sharks but used their home address. I believe my
    daughter borrowed money to support my son-in-law, who has problems with his transport
    business, said Liew, who came to the MCA Public Services and Complaint Department
    last week. The two women not only hurl abuses, but at one point, spotted Liew at a
    function she was attending and shamed her in public. Once, said Liew, the woman loan
    shark, who is in her 50s and her 20-something daughter, even brought along two burly men
    to the house to threaten her. But fortunately for Liew, she and her husband invested in a
    CCTV camera recently which they installed outside their home.  | 
  
    | The Evils that
    Women Suffer. [Philippines] An 
Indian lady I was speaking to a week ago must have
    thought I was too smug when I told her that violence against women is not, or perhaps, is
    no longer a big issue in this country. I, of course, premised my comment to her on reports
    I read that in Davao city, crimes 
against women decreased by as
much as 45 percent in
    2005. And in Dumaguete, it has likewise been reported that there has been a substantial
    drop in reported cases of violence against women since the Law on Violence Against Women
    in the Philippines took 
effect in 2003. She,
 on the other hand, said that despite the
    rapid spread of Western lifestyle in India,
women were still not accorded the same rights
    and entitlement in society as men. In poor families, female babies are sometimes thrown
    into water wells or killed by other means. Often too she said, a wife is beaten by the
    husband for giving birth to female babies because they are considered a burden to the
    family. In India, she says, 
dowry is paid by
 the brides family to the grooms
    family in varying amounts depending on the stature in society of the male. Women whose
    parents cannot afford to pay dowry can expect to remain single all their lives and thus,
    be a continuing burden to their families. While I have also read accounts that in some
    Arab countries, 47 percent of all women killed were murdered by a relative after they had
    been raped to cleanse the defiled family honor, this issue did not then bother
    me much as it seemed too distant to affect me. Our society after all is matriarchal and
    women here are respected more than other women in some countries of the world. And perhaps
    to bolster this, we have had two female presidents while the United States of
 America,
    which claims to be a champion of equality and civil liberties, has had none. | 
  
    | Women's Rail
    Cars Launched. [Taiwan] 
The Taiwan Railway Administration (TRA) added a women-only
    carriage to every train yesterday to protect female passengers from sexual harassment by
    males. The TRA launched the special coach for female commuters in response to increasing
    complaints by women about groping hands on trains and calls from lawmakers who learned of
    the service from Japan. 
The last cabin of every train will be reserved for female
    commuters. TRA will run the service on a trial basis for three months. The first run went
    off smoothly yesterday, but few women used the special-designated coach. "It is
    because many female passengers do not know there is a women's carriage yet, and because
    the need for a women's carriage is not as urgent as in Japan," a TRA official said. Japan
    launched its female-only train cars last year after women complained of being groped and
    pinched by male passengers on crowded trains during rush hour.  | 
  
    | Female Masters
    Make Their Moves in Turin. 
[Viet Nam] Vietnamese 
female masters continued their strong
    run at the Chess Olympiad World Championship in Turin, Italy, by surpassing Slovenia 2-1
    to improve their ranking by a step. International Grand Master (IGM) Nguyen Thi Thanh An
    (Elo rating 2317) manage to hold her Slovenian rival, Muzychuk Anna, who was favoured over
    An, to a draw in the first match of Round 7 on Monday. IGM Hoang Thi Bao Tram (2349) put
    the Vietnamese women ahead when she beat Srebrnic Ana in the following game. FIDE master
    Le Thanh Tu (2239) drew Novak Ksenija in the final match. With 16 points, Vietnamese
    women, who beat Australia 
3-0 in the previous matches, moved up to 8th on the table of
    108. Tu herself scored 5.5 points to rank 23rd and Tram in 73rd with 4.5 points.
    Vietnamese FIDE master Hoang Thanh Trang, who started to play with Hungarian team early
    this year, is ranked 3rd in the individuals table with 6.5 points.  | 
  
    | Shoe
    Anti-Dumping Case: Female Workers are First Victims. [Viet Nam] More than 80% of
    workers in the footwear industry of Vietnam
are women, mostly from rural areas. They are
    first victims in the EC-triggered shoe anti-dumping case. Bich, who has been working for a
    shoe factory in Hai Phong for 10 years. Due to the anti-dumping case, her salary has
    reduced from VND800,000 to VND500,000 per month (roughly $30). However, Bich said she is
    lucky to have the job because 1,000 workers at her firm have been fired. Her family will
    be threatened if she becomes unemployed, Bich painfully put it. Tuyen, another female shoe
    worker cried when she thought of her parents, who are in bad health conditions. As her
    firm does not receive enough orders, salary has been cut since the beginning of the year.
    As a result, Tuyen does not have money to give her parents and they now even do not have
    enough rice to eat everyday. According to the Vietnam Leather & Shoe Association
    (Lefaso) and Action Aid, 500,000 Vietnamese young workers might lose their job due to the
    anti-dumping case. With current income, shoe workers can only eat instant noodles. They
    have no plan of what to do or where to go if they cannot find another job. Ms. Truong Thi
    Thuy Lien, Director of Lien Phat Shoe Company, expressed her concern, saying that a large
    number of female workers have become unemployed due to the anti-dumping case. They are all
    not trained for other jobs so it will be very, very difficult for them to change to other
    jobs. They thus might get involved in social vices as a result. Mr. Nguyen Xuan Binh,
    Deputy Director of Company 32, which is 1 of 9 firms selected for investigation, said the
    EC's preliminary decision reflects protectionism and is designed to restrict imports of
    footwear products from Vietnam 
into the EU market. |