Zürcher Nachrichten - 'Shut your mouth': Low-paid women still waiting for their #MeToo

EUR -
AED 4.301716
AFN 77.102387
ALL 96.616471
AMD 443.59572
ANG 2.096746
AOA 1074.110656
ARS 1684.073797
AUD 1.758993
AWG 2.108396
AZN 1.969468
BAM 1.957105
BBD 2.345093
BDT 142.274846
BGN 1.956007
BHD 0.441553
BIF 3442.853937
BMD 1.171331
BND 1.509332
BOB 8.045363
BRL 6.406593
BSD 1.164301
BTN 104.676122
BWP 15.509538
BYN 3.38224
BYR 22958.084827
BZD 2.341701
CAD 1.616097
CDF 2613.239193
CHF 0.932854
CLF 0.027423
CLP 1075.808999
CNY 8.274988
CNH 8.264125
COP 4497.758224
CRC 573.294418
CUC 1.171331
CUP 31.040268
CVE 110.338556
CZK 24.254104
DJF 207.332642
DKK 7.469173
DOP 74.991593
DZD 152.193302
EGP 55.679188
ERN 17.569963
ETB 181.362875
FJD 2.661028
FKP 0.878173
GBP 0.875095
GEL 3.150162
GGP 0.878173
GHS 13.36591
GIP 0.878173
GMD 86.093306
GNF 10127.924632
GTQ 8.912942
GYD 243.592389
HKD 9.11565
HNL 30.667099
HRK 7.533972
HTG 152.464242
HUF 384.781097
IDR 19525.616879
ILS 3.760118
IMP 0.878173
INR 105.789742
IQD 1525.229804
IRR 49342.312982
ISK 148.653646
JEP 0.878173
JMD 186.706858
JOD 0.830471
JPY 182.433563
KES 151.043402
KGS 102.432364
KHR 4665.189668
KMF 494.301362
KPW 1054.231935
KRW 1724.076032
KWD 0.359305
KYD 0.970243
KZT 603.629828
LAK 25249.724748
LBP 104262.760889
LKR 359.538149
LRD 205.499626
LSL 19.790509
LTL 3.458635
LVL 0.708527
LYD 6.336359
MAD 10.761174
MDL 19.82213
MGA 5198.532133
MKD 61.550841
MMK 2459.697828
MNT 4154.37601
MOP 9.332201
MRU 46.432945
MUR 53.96325
MVR 18.043867
MWK 2018.971787
MXN 21.296909
MYR 4.814311
MZN 74.859436
NAD 19.790509
NGN 1696.918251
NIO 42.849297
NOK 11.831326
NPR 167.483226
NZD 2.014724
OMR 0.450386
PAB 1.164276
PEN 3.91441
PGK 4.940378
PHP 69.135453
PKR 329.125834
PLN 4.227977
PYG 7933.458103
QAR 4.244229
RON 5.090017
RSD 117.381377
RUB 92.827568
RWF 1694.651428
SAR 4.395478
SBD 9.640746
SCR 16.086003
SDG 704.554117
SEK 10.833077
SGD 1.515035
SHP 0.878802
SLE 28.228883
SLL 24562.220258
SOS 664.251324
SRD 45.233288
STD 24244.183864
STN 24.516763
SVC 10.187748
SYP 12951.233403
SZL 19.783611
THB 37.189173
TJS 10.769872
TMT 4.111371
TND 3.422281
TOP 2.820284
TRY 49.900805
TTD 7.89523
TWD 36.561336
TZS 2881.45984
UAH 49.291291
UGX 4156.771079
USD 1.171331
UYU 45.630419
UZS 13975.25684
VES 301.742191
VND 30838.213177
VUV 143.479984
WST 3.256414
XAF 656.402992
XAG 0.018862
XAU 0.000278
XCD 3.16558
XCG 2.098417
XDR 0.816355
XOF 656.4086
XPF 119.331742
YER 279.391668
ZAR 19.827656
ZMK 10543.376279
ZMW 27.076397
ZWL 377.168059
  • RYCEF

    0.2300

    14.85

    +1.55%

  • VOD

    0.0350

    12.595

    +0.28%

  • SCS

    0.0200

    16.14

    +0.12%

  • RIO

    0.4100

    76.65

    +0.53%

  • NGG

    0.2600

    74.9

    +0.35%

  • GSK

    0.4700

    48.88

    +0.96%

  • AZN

    -0.4450

    91.065

    -0.49%

  • BTI

    0.1450

    58.905

    +0.25%

  • BCC

    0.7400

    77.75

    +0.95%

  • JRI

    -0.0350

    13.685

    -0.26%

  • RELX

    0.2900

    40.37

    +0.72%

  • RBGPF

    3.1200

    81.17

    +3.84%

  • BCE

    0.3400

    23.53

    +1.44%

  • CMSC

    0.0650

    23.365

    +0.28%

  • CMSD

    0.0350

    23.315

    +0.15%

  • BP

    -0.1600

    35.72

    -0.45%

'Shut your mouth': Low-paid women still waiting for their #MeToo
'Shut your mouth': Low-paid women still waiting for their #MeToo / Photo: Valentine CHAPUIS - AFP

'Shut your mouth': Low-paid women still waiting for their #MeToo

"You need the work," one woman said, "so you shut your mouth." #MeToo may have helped change the landscape for women in Hollywood and in the boardroom, but cleaners, secretaries and supermarket workers who have suffered sexual violence at work say it has yet to do much for them.

Text size:

Yasmina Tellal, 42, spent six years picking and packing fruit and vegetables in the south of France.

"From the start" her bosses "established a system of fear", she told AFP. "They would come to kiss us during breaks, touch us and try to make us take 300 euros ($350) to sleep with them.

"One day while I was in the car with my supervisor, he stopped at a rest area, grabbed my hand and placed it on his thing," she said, struggling to get the words out, even a decade on.

Tellal arrived in France from Spain in 2011 with a promise of work through a Spanish temp agency. She thought she was getting a one-year contract at the French minimum wage -- around 1,800 euros per month -- with accommodation and meals provided.

But that is not how it turned out. "I was paid around 400 euros, sometimes less. I had to figure out the rent on my own, and working conditions were inhumane," she said.

"When you don't have money, you're trapped, forced to stay and keep quiet," she said. Then her body began to give.

The dizziness and paralysis started in 2015. Doctors diagnosed multiple sclerosis, which she puts down to the stress and trauma.

"They ruined my life," Moroccan-born Tellal told AFP. But she used her anger to drive her fight for justice -- "I had nothing left to lose."

The Spanish couple who ran the agency were eventually jailed for five years in 2021 -- three of them suspended -- for breaching labour laws. But they were not charged with human trafficking, as Tellal's lawyer, Yann Prevost, had demanded.

Nor did the labour court address the sexual violence she suffered.

After a long and protracted fight, the former farm worker finally won 32,000 euros in damages in 2023, a sum upheld on appeal in June.

While Prevost hailed her as a standard-bearer and "whistleblower", hers is a rare story of a low-paid victim standing up against the odds.

Six out of 10 women questioned in the UK, France, Germany, Italy and Spain said they experienced sexism or harassment at work in a major 2019 study by the Foundation for European Progressive Studies (FEPS).

More than one in 10 said they were victims of "forced" or "non-consensual" sexual relations.

- From sexist jokes to rape -

Marie, a medical secretary, was raped and harassed by one of the doctors she worked for in a Paris suburb. But for months the 42-year-old mother could not quite believe what was happening to her.

She had moved to the area after a difficult break-up, and the doctor had assured her that "there was a great atmosphere in the office, that they often went out together after work. As a small-town girl, I was delighted," she said.

But soon came "the sexist jokes, wandering hands and then my bra being opened through my clothes.

"I knew it wasn't normal but I said to myself, 'It's no big deal'. I was in denial." Until the day of the rape, which she is still unable to talk about five years later.

The breaking point came when a much younger colleague began to be the target. "I realised that if I didn't speak up, I was effectively complicit in everything happening at the clinic," she said.

Marie finally went to the police last year. "It took me a long time because I was afraid of not being believed. How could I be taken seriously when I myself had not been able to recognise what happened to me?"

- 'So normalised' -

Women like Marie -- whose name we have changed at her request -- and Yasmina "are not the kind of people who usually turn to lawyers", said Jessica Sanchez, who specialises in social law in Bordeaux, in southern France. Taking a case to court "requires a crazy amount of courage... and you have to have the means to be able to risk losing your job," she said.

"The first question they ask themselves is, 'How can I pay the rent or feed my kids?'" said Tiffany Coisnard, a legal expert with the AVFT, a European campaign group against workplace violence.

"Sexual harassment at work is so normalised as a risk of the job that many women struggle to even label it," she added.

They are often in precarious financial positions, with single parents or those whose immigration status depends on their job particularly vulnerable.

Foreigners working without papers run even higher risks of "having to reveal themselves" to the authorities and risk being deported, said Pauline Delage, a gender violence specialist at French research centre CNRS.

Only "a very small minority of workplace harassment victims break the wall of silence that paralyses older women in particular," the FEPS study found.

Even when women in lower-paid jobs speak out, they are "much less heard in the media" than actors, writers or journalists, said the AVFT.

"Very few" cases make it to the police, never mind court, a French police source told AFP, even if he insisted the way officers deal with victims has "evolved".

"Now we take care to reassure them... There is a guide with things not to say and not to do."

But even he admitted that some police officers, both men and women, are "boorish", with "no compassion".

- Even unions affected -

In theory, victims should be able to report abuse to their employers or their union.

But sometimes union representatives are conflicted about supporting victims when it means getting a "colleague fired, even if they've been accused of sexual harassment", said Coisnard.

But French unions FO and CGT, which have themselves been hit with abuse and harassment cases within their branches, insist things have changed.

"A few years ago there was probably the idea that union advocacy outweighed individual cases," said Beatrice Clicq, a sexual violence officer for FO.

The union was fined nearly a quarter of a million euros in February over sexual harassment in one of its branches in Brittany, in western France.

"What could have been tolerated 15 years ago is no longer acceptable," insisted Myriam Lebkiri, who holds the same position at the CGT.

- Hotel cleaners revolt -

A marathon strike by cleaners at an Ibis hotel in Paris made headlines around the world when one of the housekeepers, Rachel Keke, was elected to parliament in 2022.

But the cases of sexual violence raised during the 22-month dispute got little traction, even though Keke herself revealed that a guest had touched her breasts.

"We talk openly about it between ourselves," Keke told AFP -- "a guest opened the door naked, another exposed his buttocks, or offered money to sleep with him... But quickly we were made to understand that it was pointless" to make a complaint, she said.

"The client is always protected." As far as management was concerned, "what happened to us was not a big deal", the 51-year-old added.

"These kinds of situations end the same way, with a mere apology from the management and that's it," sighed Sylvie Kimissa, one of Keke's former colleagues, after a long day of making beds, cleaning bathrooms and vacuuming.

A Congolese single mother, she said she has witnessed several sexual assaults. "We have no choice but to keep working."

The hotel's owner, Accor, said the management had recently been changed and "no case of harassment or assault has been reported in recent months."

- DSK scandal -

Very little has changed in the 14 years since the Dominique Strauss-Kahn scandal, experts say, when the head of the International Monetary Fund and favourite to be the next French president, nicknamed "DSK", was accused of sexually assaulting housekeeper Nafissatou Diallo in the Sofitel hotel in New York.

"All levels of the hotel trade are affected," said Maud Descamps, a trainer in sexual harassment prevention in the industry, but it is particularly problematic at the luxury end.

"The more upmarket, the more 'touchy' it gets to handle cases involving customers with extremely high purchasing power," she said.

"It continues to be minimised because it's a massive thorn in the side."

"A hotel room is a place of risk," Descamps said, "and what fuels that is very precarious working conditions, and the contracting out of staff which further waters down responsibility."

The DSK case was closed at the end of 2012 with a confidential financial agreement between him and the Guinean-born housekeeper.

While the #MeToo movement has since happened, "the social pressure on victims is still very hard to bear and the mechanism of shame and guilt remains pervasive," said lawyer Giuseppina Marras.

She represented a supermarket worker from Flixecourt in northern France who tried to kill herself in 2016, despairing at her colleagues defending the boss who had raped and sexually assaulted her on numerous occasions.

The manager was finally jailed for 10 years in March.

But there has been some progress, Marras insisted, with a "clear difference in the judicial handling of these cases compared to a decade ago".

When she defended a boss accused of raping employees back then, he "walked away with a suspended sentence".

A.Weber--NZN