Women鈥檚 freedom to ride 鈥 and provide
In more countries, women are driving motorbikes, breaking social restrictions while helping other women find safe rides. They are finding new abilities and inner freedom as they support themselves and their families.
In more countries, women are driving motorbikes, breaking social restrictions while helping other women find safe rides. They are finding new abilities and inner freedom as they support themselves and their families.
In many societies, women continue to confront a host of cultural strictures on what they 鈥渃an鈥 or 鈥渃annot鈥 do, should or shouldn鈥檛 do: Study beyond high school. Hold certain types of jobs. Drive a car too far from home.
Or ride a motorbike. This constraint isn鈥檛 just a minor inconvenience, though. When public transportation is unavailable and cars are unaffordable, a motorized two-wheeler is a lifeline. Owning and operating one helps individuals get to a job or grow a business. Every day, thousands of sputtering mototaxis (as they鈥檙e known in Latin America and the Middle East), boda-bodas (East Africa), or ojek (Indonesia) transport people and products along city streets and rural roads.
Typically, such taxi businesses have been almost entirely run by men. But bit by bit, women operators are throwing off societal and self-imposed limitations and starting a new journey.
In a remote part of Sierra Leone, for example, 鈥渂ike lady鈥 Mariama Timbo transports villagers to and from market on a motorbike, The Guardian reported. Earning about $2.50 a day, she鈥檚 bought a plot of land. Now, she鈥檚 teaching young women to ride and start a business. 鈥淎 single bike has changed my story,鈥 she said.
In Kenya, a group called Boda Girls trains women drivers and facilitates loans to purchase motorbikes. In distinctive pink uniforms, the participants transport girls and women to schools, hospitals, and work 鈥 and are community role models. In southern India, Uber Moto Women is a response to women鈥檚 concerns around safety and mobility. And Uber said it offers female drivers 鈥渇lexible earning opportunities.鈥澛犅犅
Women mototaxi drivers contend with harassment from male peers and passengers. Self-defense training, as well as being part of messaging apps and associations, helps though critics say these do not address root causes of aggression against women.
But for many women, family censure can be an even bigger challenge. Parents or husbands disapprove. Neighbors snicker. Wearing trousers in public is frowned upon. Yet, with persistence, many women drivers become family breadwinners. As a result, their children eat better, they can buy livestock and land, and they gain new respect at home and beyond.
鈥淚nclusive, safe, and affordable transportation is ... crucial for women,鈥 a World Bank study said. Without it, they are denied the ability 鈥渢o move freely ... and are less likely to find good jobs.鈥 The number of women transport providers in many countries is still minuscule. But their opportunity to expand financial horizons 鈥 as well as their freedom to explore possibilities 鈥 is vast.