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Indonesian Female Workers, Between Opportunities and Challenges

Industry is the most crucial part in the economic system in Indonesia, with manufacturing contributing 18.94 percent to GDP (Gross Domestic Product) in 2023. Progress in the industrial sector cannot be separated from the role of female workers, especially in the manufacturing, labor-intensive, agricultural, and fisheries sectors.

The percentage of women’s involvement in the manufacturing sector is 42.3 percent (BPS, 2023), and their role is much more dominant in the plantation and labor-intensive sectors at around 80 percent (VOA Indonesia, 2020). According to the results of the Rumah KitaB assessment in the Berdaya program in North Jakarta in 2021, the role of women in the manufacturing industry sector is also around 40 percent, and around 65 percent in the fisheries industry sector, especially in processing catches.

The important role of female workers in industry sectors is not comparable to the opportunity to access strategic positions such as supervisors, managers, or policy makers. Their positions are more as factory workers who are bound by short-term contracts. While male workers have more open opportunities to fill strategic positions, as supervisors, managers, and company leaders.

Women’s leadership in the industrial space has not been implemented well. Traditional views, beliefs, and religions have formed discriminatory gender norms, such as discrimination in employment opportunities, wage differences, and the granting of leave rights that are equal to men without considering their biological roles.

The results of the Rumah KitaB Research (2023) on Working Women in Jakarta, Bekasi, Depok, and Bandung, have shown that women’s working period is only about five years. After they have a family, they voluntarily (some are forced) decide to stop working, arguing that they are not the main breadwinners.

Equal participation of women with men in employment does not necessarily put them in a good bargaining position. For example, in the garment and footwear sector in Jakarta, Bekasi, and Bandung, women’s income is lower with shorter work contracts, so they are more accepted to work than men. This shows that women’s job opportunities are more open in the manufacturing sector, not meaning that women are more valued in the industrial sector but rather it is a gender discriminatory practice by some business actors.

In the education industry sector in Jakarta, Bekasi, and Bandung, most of the honorary teachers and lecturers are filled by women, with incomes of around one-fifth of the Provincial Minimum Wage standard, such as DKI Jakarta and West Java. While they are the backbone of the world of education, both in the private and state sectors.

The important role of women in various industrial sectors above is also not supported by proper reproductive health protection. The National Commission on Violence Against Women’s records in 2024 showed that there were 2,702 cases of violence against women in the manufacturing industry, including sexual, physical, psychological, and economic violence.

On paper, the record of violence against women is still low, based on the results of the assistance of PATBM Kalibaru North Jakarta, the potential for reports of violence against women in Jakarta only shows around 5-10 percent of the actual facts. Various cases handled did not reach the stage of submitting a report to the DKI Jakarta PPPA Service, or the National Commission on Violence Against Women.

Bias in Legal  Interpretation

Sisil (not her real name), 38 years old, a single mom with 2 children, said, “I once experienced sexual assault. At that time I was called to my manager’s office, there I was approached and kissed forcibly but I rebelled and could only cry. I was humiliated because I was a widow.

Kadmi (PATBM Kalibaru North Jakarta), said “They are ashamed to process cases of (sexual) violence, their families cover them up”. Some RT/RW administrators, and company leaders, in Jakarta and Bekasi only want to reconcile, because it is considered a normal problem, and do not want to extend the problem to the legal realm.

Sugeng Martono, a lawyer in Bekasi, said “The main problem with legal assistance for sexual violence is the issue of witnesses. If there are no witnesses or even only one witness, the complaint cannot be processed legally by the police.”

Sisil’s experience above cannot be reported to the police, and the perpetrator can still roam free. According to Sisil, investigators will not possibly side with her, because there were no witnesses at the time of the incident. According to her, she is still luckier than her co-workers who were forced to have sex.

Sisil’s case is like an iceberg phenomenon, many victims are reluctant to tell their stories, they are worried about discriminatory social views against sexual victims in their extended family and community. Usually, survivors of sexual violence can only tell their stories after several years of the incident, due to depression, fear, and the victim’s mental breakdown, especially having to see the perpetrator every time they come to work.

In terms of legal infrastructure, protection for women in Indonesia has improved, with the presence of the Sexual Violence Crime Law 12/2022, but still facing implementation in the field, especially regarding the perspective and interpretation of society, weak law enforcement, and the absence of siding with victims, is still a serious job.[]

Finlandia mengucapkan terima kasih atas kontribusi terhadap kesetaraan dengan pengakuan khusus – Yayasan Rumah Kita Bersama dari Indonesia adalah di antara para penerimanya

Jakarta, 11 Juli 2019

Finlandia sangat mementingkan promosi kesetaraan di dunia, dan ingin mengucapkan terima kasih kepada mereka yang bekerja untuk tujuan bersama ini. Untuk mengungkapkan rasa terima kasihnya, Finlandia menghadirkan pengakuan khusus kepada individu dan kelompok di seluruh dunia. Nama-nama penerima pertama penghargaan ini dari 17 negara sudah dirilis, dengan salah satu penghargaan diberikan kepada Yayasan Rumah Kita Bersama Indonesia.

Kesetaraan adalah nilai utama bagi Finlandia dan rakyatnya. Untuk menyoroti pentingnya kesetaraan dan untuk menunjukkan rasa terima kasih atas pekerjaan berharga yang sedang dilakukan untuk memajukan kesetaraan dalam masyarakat, Finlandia menghadirkan pengakuan khusus kepada individu dan kelompok di seluruh dunia. Finlandia ingin mendorong adanya diskursus tentang kesetaraan dan mempromosikan inisiatif untuk masyarakat yang lebih inklusif.

Yayasan Rumah Kita Bersama adalah lembaga penelitian yang bertujuan untuk memberdayakan perempuan, anak-anak dan kelompok yang terpinggirkan di Indonesia. Visi mereka adalah untuk mewujudkan kesetaraan dalam masyarakat dengan menyoroti struktur sosial dan agama yang diskriminatif melalui advokasi, pendidikan dan pembangunan kesadaran. Lembaga ini dipimpin oleh Ibu Lies Marcoes-Natsir, seorang pakar di bidang hak-hak perempuan, kesehatan reproduksi dan gender dalam Islam.

“Kami berterima kasih atas penghargaan Hän Honours yang mengakui pekerjaan humanis ini, pentingnya kesetaraan di antara orang-orang, dan penerimaan keanekaragaman etnis, ras, agama dan gender. Untuk Rumah Kita Bersama, pengakuan ini memotivasi kami untuk bekerja lebih aktif di masyarakat ”, kata Lies Marcoes-Natsir, saat menerima Hän Honours di Kedutaan Besar Finlandia di Jakarta pada 11 Juli 2019.

“Pekerjaan Rumah Kita Bersama merangkum dengan sangat baik arti dari kampanye kesetaraan ini,” kata Duta Besar Jari Sinkari pada upacara penghargaan.

“Hän” adalah kata ganti orang ketiga tunggal netral dalam bahasa Finlandia dan simbol dari kampanye karena mewakili peluang yang setara.

Penerima lain penghargaan ini adalah individu dan kelompok dari Singapura, Kroasia, Namibia, Norwegia dan Jepang. Mereka mewakili berbagai bidang, termasuk pendidikan, hak-hak minoritas dan kesetaraan gender.

Pengakuan ini merupakan bagian dari kampanye yang lebih luas tentang kesetaraan, diluncurkan pada Juni 2019 dan berlanjut hingga akhir tahun. Finlandia ingin mengangkat isu tentang kesetaraan di perbincangan internasional.

Pada 2017, tahun Finlandia merayakan peringatan 100 tahun kemerdekaannya, negara itu mempromosikan aksi di seluruh dunia atas nama kesetaraan gender dan meluncurkan International Gender Equality Prize yang pertama. Penghargaan diberikan untuk yang kedua kalinya di tahun 2019.

Daftar penerima pengakuan: https://finland.fi/han/#Han_honours
Situs web kampanye kesetaraan Finlandia: www.finland.fi/han
Situs web Rumah Kita Bersama: https://rumahkitab.com/
IGEP: https://genderequalityprize.fi/en