Tuesday, 7 October 2014

Reading about Ebola is heart breaking.

I've been reading a bit about the Ebola outbreak the last few days. You can have this vague idea in the back of your head that there's an extremely rare but devastating illness in West Africa but the actual reality of it not hit home. West Africa is a long way away, the numbers still sound kinda low, but when you look a little closer, there are over now 7000 confirmed cases and they suspect the actual number of cases to be 2-3 times that. Each person is infecting about 2 others. The fatality rate is about 70%. Those are really overwhelming figures.

Then there is the lived experience of these people. They are nursed in isolation facilities and most will die a gruesome death, vomiting, diarrhea, bleeding and multiple organ failure, with only strangers in spacesuits with them. Or they are amongst the uncounted cases in the community, cared for mostly by women at home, who are almost inevitably going to be infected themselves as the virus spread through the body fluids that will inevitably be everywhere.

And this is all in some of the poorest areas of the world. Sanitation is limited at the best of times, and this is not one of them. Health care services are limited and completely unprepared to deal with this outbreak.  Wars, corruption, civil unrest and so forth make it more difficult to access care or have built mistrust in government systems.  In short, the virus couldn't have picked a better place to ensure its own survival. My heart also aches for the health care workers in these places. Many, especially local workers, would not have the equipment available to protect them, or the knowledge of the risk before it was too late. They too are dying in large numbers.  Special facilities have been set up to provide care, but it is a small fortune in equipment, water and chemicals to contain the virus within them. But not only does West Africa need money, equipment and chemicals, it needs health care workers. These people not only face the risk of catching Ebola, but also watching the tragedy of it. Imagine caring for a population who are suffering terribly and 70% of them will die within days. The strength of these people is amazing, but supportive care can reduce mortality to 30%. That's a huge difference that medical teams can have.

In the face of all of this, the richer world has been slow to act. Even now, with countries sending medical staff and military assistance to build treatment centres, Australia is offering only a small amount of money. We carry on about burkas, conduct terrorist raids for toy swords and send military troops and equipment to Iraq, but only a few million to control a humanitarian crisis spiraling out of control. Even if you only wanted to be selfish about it, Ebola is spreading at such a rate that it will become a crisis for more than just West Africa. A much bigger global threat than terrorism. More people have died in Liberia in the last few months than in the Sept 11 attacks. But hey, it's all happening to black people in Africa right now, so who cares?

Monday, 6 October 2014

I'm uncomfortable with my shared discomfort with conservative nutcases.

I hate admitting I have anything in common with a bunch of conservative nutwits, but I have a problem with burkas. Yes, I know that there are a bunch of different veils associated with Islam, but I am being slack and just using the term-du-jour for my convenience. It's not really au fait amongst the left at the moment to criticise religious veiling, but when it boils down to it, I have a problem with any cultural/religious dictation of what women should and shouldn't wear. I'm not terrified it is a security risk and I am appalled at a bunch of privileged white and mostly male people attempting to further ostracise a minority group for political sway. This does not however, change my concern about cultural regulation of women. Yes, I know there are women who choose to wear a veil. Choices always happen in a context, and women are great at self policing. We have been conveniently helping cultural norms keep us within an acceptable range for a long time across many cultures and religions. Women also choose to wear makeup, shave their bodies, obsessively diet, have plastic surgery etc etc. That doesn't change the common theme of the controlling of women's bodies. Whether they have to be covered up or enhanced, we are still telling women what is and isn't OK about them. And there is a common theme of focusing on women's sexuality. Women are covered up in order to protect men from their sexuality or women are dressed up in order to show off their sexuality. But not too much. Because then they are asking for men to lose all control and assault them. It's all bollocks.

I'm struggling to think of an internet selfie campaign that I haven't had a problem with, but I am currently uncomfortable with the #WISH one. Part of it is the nature of "selfie activism".  It's very easy to take a photo and bung it online and feel all gooey inside but, has anything really changed? The other is around what sort of things become popular selfie campaigns. Call me cynical (ok, I accept I am actually cynical), but they all seem to be ones in which you can rather participate in without really doing anything confronting. No make up selfies was full of cute pictures. Women against feminism was full of cute pictures. And WISH is full of cute pictures of women in scarves. The interpretation of the hijab is all quite flexible (and indeed it seems to be in the muslim community as well, which does seem like a good thing) where you grab your favourite scarf and drape it attractively over your head. We don't see women putting a full black or blue veil on. And I see a few men posting selfies saying they are also in solidarity. Where are their hijabs?????  Surely there is no less pointlessness in men wearing women's religious head wear than non-islamic women wearing it? I accept this is all well meaning and maybe some women are feeling less ostracised by the number of women posting photos, but I'm wondering where are the selfie campaigns in solidarity with victims of domestic violence, acid attacks, female genital mutilation ... oh wait, they won't make for cute pictures.

#confusedcatsinsolidaritywithhijabis Sorry, i couldn't resist.