The Syrian Observatory For Human Rights

UN campaign blasted for ‘tasteless’ portrayals of Syria’s rural poor

Social media users accuse video of promoting ‘ugly messages and entrenching social schisms’ in war-torn country
The United Nations Development Programme (UNDP) has come under fire for showcasing a “tasteless” campaign video for its latest project in Syria intended to shed light on social issues in the war-torn country.

The video clip, published on Twitter on Sunday by UNDP Syria for the organisation’s Theatre for Change project, was accompanied by a quote from UN Secretary-General Antonio Guterres: “Many women under lockdown for #COVID19 face violence where they should be safest: in their own homes.”

In the video, a number of men and women – portraying abusers and victims, and acted out by Syrians – are seen in a darkened, filthy building set in Hama.

“Forty kilometres from the city centre, I come to this place every Thursday to meet a group of people living in it, hoping to help them in any way,” a male narrator is heard saying at the beginning of the video.

It goes on to introduce a series of characters, from a teenage boy who has “harassed more than five girls”, his father who “works as a bus driver” and married a 14-year-old bride, a “poor lady who eats a lot, when there’s food to eat”, to a “lonely 40-year-old woman” with a cigarette dangled from her lips.

The clip then ends by stating that “people like this” exist everywhere, and the “real solution” is to “help them get out of this dark place”.

The video is meant to “empower youth and provide them with tools through theatre to express themselves”. Instead, it has been called “tone deaf” and generated a wave of outcry on social media.

Charles Lister

@Charles_Lister

This @UNDP/@UndpSyria video pushes tasteless & bigoted narratives of ‘s rural & urban poor.

Far from pushing ““, this exemplifies the elite vs. poor division that drove the 2011 uprising.

Beyond poor judgement @UNDP – you should remove this, not promote it. https://twitter.com/UndpSyria/status/1262112328327233537 

UNDP Syria

@UndpSyria

“Many women under lockdown for #COVID19 face violence where they should be safest: in their own homes” @antonioguterres @UNDP #Syria is helping #youth shed light on social issues. How can we get these ppl out of this dark place? Full vid👉https://bit.ly/368kKgF#SocialCohesion

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“That it would pass muster with multiple layers of UNDP bureaucracy says so much about how ill-equipped this agency is for what it claims to be doing,” one Twitter user commented.

“Reinforcing the most damaging and divisive stereotypes in Syrian society, from an organisation that’s trusted with millions of dollars to fund development,” another tweeted.

Mai El-Sadany@maitelsadany

Disturbing that @UNDP–whose tag line is “Empowered lives. Resilient nations”–thought it was appropriate to caricature a people who have lived through 9 years of war, while playing into tropes about rural and marginalized communities. https://twitter.com/UndpSyria/status/1262112328327233537 

UNDP Syria

@UndpSyria

“Many women under lockdown for #COVID19 face violence where they should be safest: in their own homes” @antonioguterres @UNDP #Syria is helping #youth shed light on social issues. How can we get these ppl out of this dark place? Full vid👉https://bit.ly/368kKgF#SocialCohesion

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Elizabeth Tsurkov

@Elizrael

This is what @UNDP donor funds are being spent on in Syria: a bizarre experimental video about gender-based violence. What they are not being spent on – rehabilitating survivors of the rape industrial complex run by the Assad regime’s secret police. https://twitter.com/UndpSyria/status/1262112328327233537 

UNDP Syria

@UndpSyria

“Many women under lockdown for #COVID19 face violence where they should be safest: in their own homes” @antonioguterres @UNDP #Syria is helping #youth shed light on social issues. How can we get these ppl out of this dark place? Full vid👉https://bit.ly/368kKgF#SocialCohesion

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Many have since called for the confusing clip to be taken down, and have questioned how the funding given to the organisation is actually aiding Syrians, who have seen their lives turned upside down by nine years of war.

On its website, UNDP details how the project aims to promote social cohesion and to encourage Syrian youth to express themselves in order to see the “positive change they want to see in their communities”.

However the nature of the campaign has instead drawn criticism for pandering to problematic stereotypes of rural communities which observers have said will only succeed in deepening the social divides in the conflict-ridden country.

Middle East Eye reached out to UNDP for comment but received no reply by the time of publication.

UNDP Syria

@UndpSyria

“Many women under lockdown for face violence where they should be safest: in their own homes” @antonioguterres @UNDP is helping shed light on social issues. How can we get these ppl out of this dark place? Full vid👉https://bit.ly/368kKgF

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Robin Yassin-Kassab@Qunfuz1

To say you have failed Syrians is an understatement. Along with Iran, you have kept the genocidal fascist regime afloat financially. This ridiculous film is insult atop insult. Just shut up.

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Idrees Ahmad

@im_PULSE

The extraordinary stupidity and tone-deafness of this! Reminded me of the racist comments UN soldiers made about Bosnian women while “peacekeeping” in the Balkans. https://twitter.com/UndpSyria/status/1262112328327233537 

UNDP Syria

@UndpSyria

“Many women under lockdown for #COVID19 face violence where they should be safest: in their own homes” @antonioguterres @UNDP #Syria is helping #youth shed light on social issues. How can we get these ppl out of this dark place? Full vid👉https://bit.ly/368kKgF#SocialCohesion

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Gender-based violence

The issue of violence in Syria, particularly as a tool of war used against women, has tragically defined the war since it began in 2011.

In 2018, a UN Commission found how thousands of women, girls, men and boys were subjected to sexual and gender-based violence during the war which was used as a tool to instil fear, humiliation and punishment.

According to a report published by the UN’s Population Fund (UNFPA) in the same year, Syrian women in refugee camps were being forced to offer sexual favours in return for aid from the UN and some victims were allegedly forced to marry locally hired officials working for the UN and other international charities for “sexual services” in exchange for meals.

Last year, a Syrian Network for Human Rights report concluded that women have been subjected to extrajudicial killings, arbitrary arrests, torture, executions, enforced disappearances, sexual violence, forced displacement, siege warfare, and denial of healthcare and basic services.

The UNDP has come under criticism for a campaign video (Louai Beshara/AFP)
The views expressed in this article do not necessarily reflect the views and editorial stance of the SOHR.

Source: UN campaign blasted for ‘tasteless’ portrayals of Syria’s rural poor | Middle East Eye