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Small businesses, big dreams: Iraq’s women entrepreneurs

AFP . Baghdad
26 Jan 2023 00:00:00 | Update: 26 Jan 2023 03:23:13
Small businesses, big dreams: Iraq’s women entrepreneurs
Alaa Adel, an Iraqi fashion designer, works at her studio in the capital Baghdad on January 11– AFP Photo

The sewing machines and fabric that surround Alaa Adel at her “Iraqcouture” studio in Baghdad are testament to her success in deeply patriarchal Iraq.

Adel, 33, counts herself among a limited number of female entrepreneurs in a country where most women don’t work outside the home.

“We have a social tradition that prevents many women from working,” Adel said at her studio in Baghdad’s Karrada commercial district.

Even for those who do, “it is not always that easy,” she added.

The International Organization for Migration said in an October report that “prevailing customs and traditions... limit women’s activities to their domestic and nurturing role”.

Adel said such prejudices, as well as practical difficulties, posed a challenge to fulfilling her dream.

A graduate of the University of Baghdad who specialised in fashion and design, Adel wanted to create her own fashion house.

“I went to see the patrons of organisations that support art and culture. But my idea was systematically rejected because I had no experience in the conception of projects,” she said.

Thanks to an Iraqi foundation, The Station, and its “Raidat” (Female Entrepreneurs) programme financed by the French embassy in Baghdad, Adel got training which, she said, gave her the confidence to start her own business.

Obstacles

Iraq’s private sector is still embryonic, making more tedious and lengthy the steps to set up a company.

The country, which is trying to move past four decades of war and unrest, is also plagued by endemic corruption, widespread unemployment and a poverty rate of around 30 percent.

Almost 38 percent of people with jobs work in Iraq’s public sector -- one of the highest rates in the world, according to the International Labour Organization (ILO). Adel eventually secured a loan from a private bank, and created her “Alaa Adel” brand last summer.

At the beginning, she had to deal with sexism from some fabric suppliers who were reluctant to do business with a woman, she said.

Then there was a lack of public childcare facilities, in a country where tradition says children should be taken care of at home -- by the mother -- until they go to school. Adel got help from family members who look after her two boys, aged nine and four, while she is at work.

Complicated

Iraq has 13 million employment-aged women “yet only around one million are working”, said ILO country coordinator Maha Kattaa, presenting a report in July last year.

The female labour force participation rate “was particularly low” at 10.6 percent, the ILO report said, compared with 68 percent for men. In contrast, neighbouring Saudi Arabia -- until a few years ago one of the world’s most restrictive countries for women -- had a female workforce participation rate of 35.6 percent in the second quarter of 2022.

Most of Iraq’s working women are teachers or nurses. A rare few are members of the police or armed forces.

For Shumoos Ghanem, men “dominate numerous sectors whereas women are relegated to the margins”.

The 34-year-old is the owner of a dietary food business and founder of the Iraqi Women in Business initiative, which provides professional guidance to women online. She is also a mother to a 14-month-old son.

Ghanem says most of those she advises are mothers who have been out of the workforce and “wonder if society will accept them” again as working women.

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