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Having only limited access to food, money, shelter, and every   women with disabilities,  and women who have married into a
       means for a safe, comfortable life is a reality that Katia Cakacaka   community with more risk of social isolation and lack of kinship or
       lived with for most of her life. Katia, who was raised on Matuku,   local status. “Poverty in Fiji is not just about lack of decent work.
       one of Fiji’s very remote islands, shared that her family struggled   It is that work in Fiji is a hybrid of communalism and individualist
       a lot “since there were six of us needing  school”. “Black tea   neoliberal capitalist systems. Women are captured in oppressive
       and cassava were a normal menu item. Whatever money mum   familial and  community  relationships, to  provide endless work
       received, she made sure that we had flour, sugar, rice, and oil   while being subjected to heightened conditions of poverty. This,
       in the cupboard. For the rest of the food to go with it, she went   while the State and society choose not to see, nor to respond, to
       fishing or got vegetables from the plantation,” she recalled.   the consequences,” the report stated.
        Poverty hit harder when she and her family decided to relocate   The articulation of national, regional, and global development
       to the capital city of Suva, as her parents “thought that putting   strategies and measures to  address poverty  and economic
       us in a boarding school would be best”. “I saw how much they   injustice  generally  do not address patriarchy  and misogyny,
       were struggling to put us into boarding school so when it was   it stressed. “The feminisation  of poverty and  gender  injustice
       my turn to continue my studies in Suva, I opted to stay with a   deepens as legislation, policy and practice do not serve women,
       relative in Vatuwaqa [a neighhourhood near Suva] so that it could   children nor gender diverse people but rather an imagined male
       ease their burden,” she said. “Going through this experience was   led, nuclear  family-oriented  system that is colonial,  patriarchal
       a big challenge as I tried to navigate my way through. I had to   and does not serve us in this complex time of polycrises, climate
       walk most of the time back home from school, since I was not   emergency, and ecological unrest,” it added. DIVA is aiming to
       given enough cash, and I would be fed nicely only if mum and   address these issues at the 68th Commission on the Status of
       dad sent food rations on time,” she added. Katia, a survivor of   Women (CSW68) in New York on the 11th to the 22nd of March
       breast cancer and gender-based violence, says despite facing   this year.
 New report sheds light on  adversity, it was support from her family and her faith in God that   Executive Director of DIVA, Noelene Nabulivou, at the launching
       kept her.
                                                            people, that in order to make things really about no one [being]
        Penina Tusoya, a single mother, has faced similar challenges:   of the report, said: “We’re saying to each other, as women and as
 Fijian women’s experiences with Poverty   “Moving  through  so  many  work  fields  was  one  of  the  many   left behind, we have to look behind us and also say, am I part of
       challenges of my life as I tried to find a secure job to support   the problem? Am I not providing support to women and girls in
       my children.” She says joining a well-known regional organisation   my own area of work? Am I maybe leaving out people who really
       and earning only $20 FJD a day was just not enough. “It is very   need urgent and lifelong support to change the systems? “The
       unfair to women when overseas staff make so much money. They   government already says that there are issues to do with water
       paid me as a ‘volunteer’ even though I have qualifications,” she   and sanitation, to do with housing, to do with adequate issues
       said. “A time came when I was only given $30 FJD a week for my   around gender-based violence and violence against children.
       transport to and from work after my formal contract had expired.   What we need to do now is to work out what we are going to do
       So, my children and I walked miles to my workplace for months,   about it,” she said.
       and I saved whatever I could for my children to eat and pay bills,
       at the end of the week,” she added.                    “When we go to CSW68, we’re not just interested in what’s the
                                                            language in the UN. We’re interested in feminists who are working
        Penina is now looking after a community centre and garden,   on it at a ground level. What is it that we bring that maybe other
       focusing on  women-led agroecology and  other  projects at  the   groups don’t bring? They bring their own analysis, but we bring
       Diverse  Voices and  Action for Equality  (DIVA), a grassroots   our knowledge from the streets and from the communities. “You
       feminist collective based in Nadi, Fiji. “They (DIVA) offered me   should not just be talking up in the air. You should be listening to
       work and gave me all kinds of care, support, and feminist training.   those of us who are doing the work on the ground. So that’s our
       I have been through so much lately, some that I thought would   right, ...that makes sense in the work that we do,” she added.
       break me… Now, I earn a living wage, and I am in a safe and
       caring workplace,” she said.                           Savena Devi, a member of DIVA’s Poverty to Power Network,
                                                            reiterated: “We really need to know what our community needs
        In February, DIVA released a new report, ‘Gender, Poverty and   and we should not work in silos.” As a grassroots woman leader,
       Economic  Justice in Fiji: Grassroots-led  Feminist and  Human   Savena has helped numerous women in Rakiraki, a small town
       Rights Analysis’, which revealed that for female poverty, Oceania   on the north-eastern end of Viti Levu, engaging them in “local
       has the second highest rate (34.3%) after Sub-Saharan Africa   community activities to make use of the resources around”.
       (41.2%). The report highlights 23 sensitively described brave and   “Gardening, farming – poultry, vegetables, crop and fruits, include
       often harrowing life-stories and analysis of the DIVA Poverty to   people in organic awareness campaigns, form groups or clubs to
       Power Network, of which Katia and Penina are members. “Poverty   help community members, and all these can change things to
       is very much present in the Pacific region, whether we choose to   some extent,” she said.
       recognise it or not. It is a major gender and development justice   “If  I  can  change,  others can change.” Savena believes to
       issue  in  Pacific  small  island  states  and  societies,”  the  report
                                                            overcome poverty,  change is necessary. “Many of us can live
       stated. “It  is a gross unfairness and distortion that Fijian state
                                                            through poverty but we can be transformed to having power in
       and society do not recognise  in policy  or in practice the huge
       burden of unpaid care, domestic and communal work carried by   ourselves. I think we need to start from childhood, not when we’re
                                                            older. We can teach our children financial literacy and savings
       the women, girls, and gender diverse people,” it continued.
                                                            and teach them to budget – we use a part of their school spending
        According to the Fiji Country Gender  Assessment, unpaid   and save the rest. Help them make this a habit and understand
       work is highest among young mothers, single mothers, widows,   the importance of money and saving.”

                    To read the full report, visit the DIVA official website at https://divafiji.org/research/



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