Automatically translated from Basque, translation may contain errors. More information here. Elhuyarren itzultzaile automatikoaren logoa

Tarana Karim: "As women and immigrants we suffer discrimination of various kinds"

  • The lawyer of study, Tarana Karim is a tireless activist. He was born in Azerbaijan and has been living in Hernialde for years. Within the framework of the project Inor Ez Da Ilegala told us about the violence suffered by migrant women in the Basque Country. In addition to the video, you can also listen to the podcast conversation on this link.

18 December 2020 - 07:00

“The fact of being an immigrant in Euskal Herria, unfortunately, has more drawbacks than good ones. To begin with, all of us who come from outside do not have that label, because those who come from the European Union are foreigners, but those of us who are not of the upper class and outside of it are given an immigrant label,” Karim has launched. “We receive oppression and discrimination in many areas, because of our roots, because of our religion, because of the color of our skin…”

He has stressed that on the street we are seeing great police racism during the pandemic, especially in men of Arab or black origin, but that women suffer from such racism in other spaces. For example, in CIES migrant retention centres: “They are prisons for immigrants and they are justified by the institutions.”

“I am Muslim and the Islamophobia we receive in public spaces is great, it is reflected in the street in Islamophobia fed in media, social networks, videos on the internet…”. Equally in the world of work: he says that they close their doors easily, that titles question their ability and that the scarf is always a source of conflict: “The handkerchief asks us to be removed from the working world or becomes a difficulty accessing employment.”

Karim wanted to recall the exploitation of women who work in the world of care: “Between 80 and 90% of the people who work in the world of care are women in Latin America and their labor rights are scarce: they are in a model that is not covered by any law (working all week and only a couple of hours on Sunday) and for a salary that does not reach 1,000 euros. There are many women who are taking on care work and society is looking elsewhere, because these women can go out to work with the care of their homes, that is what their economy is based on.” It has defended the need to guarantee these workers decent working conditions with minimum rights and has pointed out that domestic workers are already struggling to improve the situation.

"Prostitution is called work, but it's slavery."

He recalled that about 97 per cent of women in the world of prostitution and sex trafficking are foreign and that they are an enslaved group. “Even if you call it work, because it’s slavery. The money generated by these businesses is a great deal, and that is why it is not in the interests of politicians to ban it or impose fines on consumers. Because consumers are primarily responsible, because in our capitalist and patriarchal society many men think that with money they can do anything, and specifically in this area, that they can do anything with the body of women if they are paid. A part of society argues that it is a sex work, but it is not a job, this structure is called work because it interests it, but when talking to anyone who is there, it realizes that it has more slavery.”

Tarana Karim has warned that another institutional oppression faced by migrants is the law itself: immigration policy. “Here you have three years of illegality, working without papers… How can a person live without documentation? They deprive the person of the right to live in dignity: to buy a home, to work legally, to pay...”

“When people move from one place to another we move to improve our economy and the situation of our family, to work and seek a better future. If the rights of immigrants are defended, the economy and society itself will win with migration,” he stressed. He has made it clear that they will continue to fight collectively “to change this and to ensure that our rights are protected”.


You are interested in the channel: Puska dezagun izotza solasaldi zikloa
2020-12-17 | ARGIA
Beñat Irasuegi: "From the transformative social economy we must offer an alternative to people excluded by capitalism"
Beñat Irasuegi, a member of the Olatukoop network of the transformative social economy, has explained the challenges in this regard. In this text we have summarised it, but all the content is in video. These are the five challenges Irasuegi poses in the face of the next... [+]

2020-12-14 | ARGIA
Panal: Collective ownership, a model that guarantees the right to housing
Ana Almandoz and Maite Leturia are members of the housing association Abaraska and architects of the Juntura cooperative. On the occasion of the book Living in the community, a colloquium has been given on housing cooperatives in assignment of use. Because it can also have the... [+]

2020-12-11 | ARGIA
Jakoba Errekondo: "Nine out of ten domestic plants die from overdose of water"
Jakoba Errekondo has published the book Etxeko Landare. In this talk, he's given some ideas that will change the way we look at and treat plants. "Before we get closer to plants, think they're much faster than us." Do you know where most of the plants come from in our homes? In... [+]

2020-12-09 | ARGIA
Agroecology: COVID-19 has taught us the importance of using time differently
Mikela Untsain, beekeeper of Azkain, Ane Gorosabel, ortuzera of Bergara, and Miren Saiz of Getxo, member of the Bizilur association, have talked about the changes that COVID-19 has made in the way of caring for food, the situation of agroecology and the challenges of the future... [+]

2020-12-07 | ARGIA
Bouba Diouf: "We need the strength of solidarity in order not to leave anyone behind"
Bouba Diouf has referred to the difficulties experienced by migrants during the pandemic, the influence of the absence of papers, and the laws and policies they have on the most vulnerable: “Human rights should be above all.” He is a member of the Association of Senegalese... [+]

2020-12-04 | ARGIA
Jakoba Errekondo: "Basque culture sees the moon cycle in two phases, latinized cultures in four"
Jakoba Errekondo explained at this conference that Basques and Latin cultures see the moon cycle differently: in Basque culture the moon cycle has two phases, in Latin cultures four. According to Errekondo, the first calendars began with the schooling of clerics in Latin... [+]

2020-12-02 | ARGIA
Iñaki Sanz Azkue
Iñaki Sanz Azkue: Biodiversity and environmental knowledge in Basque society
The close relationship between COVID19 and the environment, the decline of biodiversity and knowledge of the environment in the Basque Country. “For the future, why should we boost that knowledge?” These are the keys that Iñaki Sanz collected in his speech, the author of... [+]

2020-11-28 | ARGIA
ARGIA reaches the end of 2020 alive
It's been a hard year for us doing ARGIA. We've felt that the wheel of history is speeding up, and we've worked a bunch of pants on this gigantic phenomenon that brings us to an unknown territory every time. However, we cannot forget that if we have the opportunity to do... [+]

Eguneraketa berriak daude