Last Wednesday, amid the myriad corporate bluster filling my inbox attempting to align anything and everything with International Women’s Day (IWD), I received a press release that took my breath away.
The Council of Australian Tour Operators (CATO) proudly announced that Visit Saudi was the official sponsor of its “sell-out” IWD event.
Yes, the same Saudi Arabia where — despite recent limited legal changes that ended the ban on women driving and made some small amendments to the oppressive guardianship law — women still must obtain a male guardian’s permission to get married, leave prison, or obtain some forms of sexual and reproductive healthcare.
And yes, the same Saudi Arabia where male guardians can bring legal action against women for “disobedience” and being absent from home.
And yes, the same Saudi Arabia that in 2018 launched a crackdown on women’s rights activists ahead of making those modest changes to the guardianship laws, including lifting the ban on driving.
Loujain al-Hathloul was among a dozen women who were arrested, and while she was released in 2021, she remains barred from travel and has a suspended sentence of nearly three years on charges that define her women’s rights activism as crimes under Saudi Arabia’s terrorism legislation.
Charming.
On, and then off
All this came up just last month when the same Visit Saudi was announced as the official sponsor of the 2023 Women’s World Cup. Women’s and human rights campaigners, understandably, broke out in hives. The Australian and New Zealand football organisations sought “urgent” clarification from FIFA over the deal and everyone cried “Sportwashing!”
Yet here we are, just a month later, and some bright spark at CATO thought it was a great idea for Visit Saudi to sponsor an IWD lunch. Even worse, the press release said the quiet part out loud, making it very clear that a leading Australian tourism industry peak body thought it should play an active role in pink-washing Saudi Arabia’s women’s rights record. And on IWD!
“Tourism plays a major role in change within any society, and as Australia’s peak industry body for the land-supply sector CATO has a role to support the education and understanding of these changes,” the press release said.
Hmmm, “education” about which “changes” exactly? Will that “education” include details of the plight of al-Hathloul and that of too many other women in Saudi Arabia today?
I have seen a lot of IWD clangers in my time — ranging from the McFeminist inverted W from McDonald’s to the launch of a range of pink beers — but this one really takes the pink cupcake. It’s the high-water mark of the trend towards the corporate takeover of IWD, and it should shock us all out of a sense of complacency and embolden us to bring the day back to first principles.
I have a reputation for being a tad bit grumpy about IWD — and I have said much of this before — but here we go again.
Fighting the good fight
While I appreciate the good intentions of those who founded the day at the turn of the century, in recent years I have watched in horror as it has strayed further and further away from its radical feminist roots.
Australia’s first International Women’s Day was in 1928 in Sydney. It was organised by the Militant Women’s Movement, which called for equal pay for equal work, an eight-hour working day for shop girls, and paid leave. But more recently focus on the discrimination and structural barriers that negatively impact women’s lives — and how we can collectively tackle them — has not featured prominently on too many IWD events’ agendas.
Instead we have been called upon to mark — or “celebrate” — the day with a corporate morning tea featuring an “inspirational” woman speaker whose hallmark moves are derived from the kind of faux, lean-in empowerment feminism that I rage against in my book Leaning Out.
We won’t give you true equality, but here, have some rosy-hued baked items and let’s all power pose. It’s white blazers at dawn!
To add insult to injury, big corporations increasingly trespassed on this tiny morsel of ground — the one day a year we were meant to be talking about “women’s issues” –, co-opting IWD to sell faux empowerment.
And now there’s a faux, corporate IWD website based in the UK run by some opaque “gender venture capital” group — what the insert expletive is that? — seeking to hijack IWD from UN Women, a United Nations entity working for gender equality and empowering women.
Indulge me in a small but important detour to this diatribe. UN Women established the official observance of IWD more than four decades ago, and it’s the body that traditionally sets the theme. It also hosts official IWD events, with the proceeds going to UN Women’s grassroots work around the world. That’s a bit more what the real deal is supposed to look like.
Instead, the gender venture capitalists want us all to give ourselves a little hug on IWD (no really, that’s what they want us to do …. and post it on social media in order to signify that we’re “embracing equity”). I’m with Professor Lisa Harvey Smith, Australia’s ambassador for women in STEM, who took to Twitter last month to say: “Honestly, if I see anyone I know posing like this on #IWD, I’m not sure whether we can still be friends.”
Given all this, it was only a matter of time before we landed at a farcical end point. Enter Saudi Arabia and CATO.
“It’s pretty ridiculous and very out of touch,” Holly Galbraith, the co-founder of Women in Tourism said. “There’s a lot of freedoms Saudi Arabian women still don’t have today, and that hasn’t changed.”
“It’s pretty clear Saudi Arabia will sponsor anyone who will have them,” said Professor Justine Nolan, director of the Australian Human Rights Institute. “We’ve had sportwashing, greenwashing and now pinkwashing.”
On, and then off… again
CATO issued another press release late last Thursday (interestingly shortly after receiving my email asking a series of questions about the wisdom of this sponsorship) announcing that the sponsorship had been withdrawn.
We accept misreading this situation, despite our best intentions, and apologise for any distress this matter has caused our industry colleagues and our board.
“If we can’t even get to a point where the sponsors align with the meaning of these IWD events, it really makes you wonder why we are having these events at all,” Nolan said.
Indeed.
Just wow. Tone deaf or what. Given how much all these things are ‘workshopped’ before they happen…..how did no-one spot this ahead of the announcement?
Tone deaf doesn’t begin to describe it.
Quite. It would be easy to believe the Council of Australian Tour Operators was trying to find the least appropriate sponsor possible, perhaps to win a bet. It takes a perverse sort of genius to come up with something as bizarre, surreal and wrong as this. Or maybe I’m wrong about that, and all it needs is a blind unthinking devotion to accepting money, no questions asked.
Hey, I hear the Taliban are going to be sponsoring IWD next year.
it was probably a LOT of money
Well, that would be some comfort. But if our pollies are any guide, they will sell themselves for buttons if that’s all they are offered.
Eight power point slides and a set of back in black mugs is the going rate, I believe, SSR.
Indeed. Always ‘follow the money’…
This reminds me of the Heart Foundation giving McDonalds a blue tick for putting a piece of lettuce in its hamburgers. But this is far more serious.
They didn’t?! Really! Why am shocked?
great article- better written and clearer thinking than others ive read. Please request an over haul of the abuses to unemployed copted women – the educated working poor trapped in the corporate indentured labour forces of the corrupt job services – used as client fodder , used as the unseen waste cleaners
The Board members of the Council of Australian Tour Operators has seven men and three women. Make one wonder how those three women aligned themselves or not, to the sponsorship deal. Perhaps the blokes had them out baking the pink cupcakes for the launch.
corporate parasite blinketed class – look at robodebt and the kacknof due dilligence from the so called responsible lucky few in powerful roles – run these companies out of our democracy as its being sold out – stop the AI HIRING MODEL which builds in descrimination via social modelling via faulty allgogrithms and data funnels – myopic lack of duty and compassion in the bastions of power
lack off (sic)
lack of !sic sick
blinkered class ! sic
discrimination
It is for this sort of thing the term crumbmaiden was coined.
I understand that the sponsorship for the International Women’s Day event has now been taken over by Visit Iran (https://www.visitiran.ir/) from the Saffron Kingdom.
Sponsorship deal as recommended by chatgpt?