People across Iceland gather during the women’s strike in Reykjavik, Iceland, Tuesday, Oct. 24, 2023. Iceland’s prime minister and women across the island nation are on strike to push for an end to unequal pay and gender-based violence.
Arni Torfason/AP
Women and nonbinary people in Iceland, including the country’s prime minister, went on strike Tuesday in protest of the country’s gender pay gap.
Organizers of the strike encouraged women and nonbinary people to stop paid and unpaid work for a full day, including childcare, household chores and “other responsibilities related to the family or home.”
Thousands of women gathered on Arnarhรณll, a hill in the country’s capital city of Reykjavรญk, and about a couple dozen other events were held around the country, such as in Drangsnes, Hvmmstangi and Raufarhรถfn.
Women earn about 21% less than men, according to the organizers, and lower wages in Iceland are most distinct among immigrant women, women who work in sanitation and with children, disabled people and elderly people.
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“International humanitarian law must be upheld, the suffering has to stop now and humanity must prevail,” Iceland Prime Minister Katrรญn Jakobsdรณttir said on X, formerly known as Twitter.
This is the seventh time since 1975 that Icelandic women have gone on strike, though Tuesday marks the first 24-hour strike since then. More than 90% of women went on strike in 1975, which paved the way for Vigdรญs Finnbogadรณttir to serve as the world’s first elected female president, according to the Icelandic Ministry for Foreign Affairs.
Other strikes happened in 1985, 2005, 2010, 2016 and 2018 to…
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