Mexico City women only bus

justoneofmillion

Junior Member
:salam2:but they don t call it backward nooooooooonoooooooooooo it is just necessary since the time of the dinosaures uh ok let s say since quite a while after.... through patriarchate and feminism ,man and women haven t changed ,but shuuuuuuuut don t say that.... it is not really trendy nowadays shuuut we are more sophisticated:SMILY259:

Mexico City - It is nearing rush hour along one of Mexico City's main boulevards, and the passing city buses are a blur of mashed cheeks and miserable scowls.

And then rolling down the road comes what seems like an alien object at this time of day: A bus with breathing space, empty seats, even a few smiles. On the front window is a sign: "Exclusively for Ladies."

Welcome to Mexico City's latest effort to make its infamously inhospitable city more manageable. The city's new female-only bus service, which began this month, is a response to complaints by women over an unacceptable number of sexual passes, verbal abuse, and lewd looks on their daily commute.

"They touch you, and push up against you or jeer at you," says Soledad Barcenas, as she waits at a bus stop for the new service. She allows three regular buses to pass by – after picking her 10-year-old niece up from school. "I care most because of her; she loves it."

The program was launched along two bus routes, and the city hopes to expand it to 15 of its 88 routes in the upcoming months. So far, 20,000 women have hopped aboard, says Ariadna Montiel Reyes, the head of Mexico City's public bus system.

As a woman in the male-dominated transport agency, she says, she has a unique perspective on sexual harassment. "When I was studying architecture at my university, apart from the discomfort of carrying all of my [tools], it happened to me. There are few women who would say they have not experienced this on public transportation."

Separating men and women on rails and roadways in an effort to increase women's safety and sense of security has been implemented elsewhere. Mexico City has been shuttling women and children into separate subway cars during rushhour for years.

Mexico City's latest scheme comes as women are asserting a greater intolerance toward sexual misconduct on public transportation across the globe. Nations from Egypt to Brazil have experimented with similar initiatives. Two summers ago, in New York City, plainclothes police staged a sting targeting gropers. It stemmed in part from a blog called hollabacknyc.com, which recounts stories of harassment. Similar blogs have spread to other regions of the country, as well as Canada.

Some see a segregation of the sexes on public transportation as regressive. Roberto Martinez, a retired union worker in Mexico City, says he is not against the idea. But he says that the city is better off focusing on education so that women are not mistreated or objectified in the first place. "Society has lost its values," he says.

And he says that, while women are more vulnerable on crammed public transportation, men are not always the villains some paint them to be. "If we touch a woman on a packed bus, it's not always on purpose," he says.

Currently 12 buses, which look like regular ones except they are decorated with pink "women only" signs, run between 6 a.m. and 9 p.m. daily. Whether this initiative will keep women safer on their commutes is up for debate. Patricia Ramirez, a smartly dressed woman on her way home from a shopping mall in the center of the city, definitely says she is happier on the women-only service. "This is much nicer; I actually have a seat," says Ms. Ramirez, whose one-hour commute to work can be exhausting. "Usually the bus is full of men – all sitting."

But, Ramirez says, she isn't likely to arrange her schedule around a more comfortable bus. "I'll take whatever bus comes first. I have to get to work."

So far, the service has only galled a few men here and there. Ms. Barcenas says that one man refused to get off the bus she was riding. "He started yelling, 'If this is public transportation, why isn't it for all of the public?' " The bus driver had to physically remove him, she says.

Driver Eduardo Rivera Ayala gently tells those men who climb into his bus – apparently overlooking the pink signs plastered on its front and side – that they aren't allowed on.

On this day none puts up a protest. But others have – which makes his 25-year stint as a city bus driver a little more difficult these days, he says.

On the other hand, he says, it's a lot easier in other ways. "Women are calmer. And cleaner." by Sara miller
 

al-fajr

...ism..schism
Staff member
:salam2:

Thats a nice move. I get a bus twice a day, almost every day, and if you're dressed in a way that its obvious you're a muslim, passengers like to avoid you at every opportunity unless they really have no choice and have to go near you - alhamdulillah.

But yeh...Ive been squashed next to this huge man on the bus who insisted on opening his newspaper as wide as it gets, taking up 3 quarters of a double seat. Womens only bus is a great idea.
 

q8penpals

Junior Member
Salam

The same sort of thing is being done in Japan on the trains. It started a few years ago. It is funny - Kuwait is a Muslim majority country, and the public busses here are brammed like sardine cans, but yet there are no separate busses for women here - the women just are in the front of the bus.

Lana

Japan Tries Women-Only Train Cars to Stop Groping

Tokyo Subway Experiment Attempts to Slow Epidemic of Subway Fondling

June 10, 2005 —

Japan's capital is facing an epidemic of men who can't keep their hands to themselves, and it's happening inside one of its most famous symbols -- the trains.
Whether above the crowded streets or below ground, Tokyo's trains are renowned for their efficiency and cleanliness.
But according to a survey conducted in Tokyo last year, nearly 64 percent of Japanese women in their 20s and 30s said they've been groped on trains, subways or at transit stations in the city.

Women Often Ashamed to Speak Out

These subway gropers -- who lean, rub and pinch during the remarkably crowded rush hours -- are known in Japanese as "chikan."
Victims are often ashamed to show their faces. They say the experience is degrading, humiliating and frightening, but most are too embarrassed to react when it's happening.
"They think it's a kind of shame to say something or to cry, 'Help, help,'" said Mihoko Ejiri, a professor at Tsuda College of Women.

Women-Only Train Cars

But now, there is some temporary relief for Japanese women -- a train car of their own. It's just an experiment now, and only during rush hour, but for those who have been harassed, it has made a huge difference.
One woman passenger told ABC News, "Because it's just only girls, females, and we don't touch, you know, so & [it's] very safe!"
Even most men seem to think the women-only cars are fair. Many men worry about being falsely accused of groping if they accidentally brush up against a woman in a packed train. Gropers can be imprisoned for up to seven years or fined up to $485.
But there's also some grumbling, especially in overcrowded adjacent cars, where the men are packed like sardines, while the ladies ride in comfort.
However, as one newpaper editorial in Tokyo suggested, the victims did not bring about the women-only experiment, but the "chikan."



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