Several Tuoi Tre (Youth) newspaper readers, including a man, have shared their experience of being victimized by sexual harassment in the workplace. Their stories speak volumes of how sophisticated and discreet ploys used to sexually harass employees have grown. Sexual pestering is no longer restricted to male employers or colleagues openly caressing female workers. The offence has extended into verbal sexual harassment involving the use of words, comments, suggestions and sexually explicit or implicit invitations which are made by scheming male superiors or colleagues. Non-verbal sexual harassment is also rife, with assaulters adopting gestures, looks, glints, body movements, images, tools, text messages, email and other means for sexual purposes. Offenders these days tend to devise elaborate schemes, patiently stalk and slowly entice their unwary “prey” into their traps. Many victims divulged they find it considerably harder to protect themselves and fight against these highly “skilled” attackers. Victims' stories Two years ago, Pham Thi Y., a 24-year-old woman who is physically attractive, was working in the public relations department of a large company in District 1, Ho Chi Minh City. After one party to welcome their business partners, the manager of Y.’s department sat down next to her and suddenly put his arm around her. Spooked off, Y. pushed him aside and promptly left. The following morning, the manager apologized to her profusely, making a feeble excuse that he was drunk the previous night. From then on, as if to show his “repentance,” the department manager grew especially considerate and usually asked after her work and family affairs. Y. realized her attitude toward the man was changing for the better. He also relocated her to a “sheltered” desk, where he would linger to talk informally to her. The man would offer her solace for her family troubles by holding her hands and giving her warm hugs. “It may sound ridiculously strange but his elaborately schemed acts of caring were so reasonable and seamless that I could hardly resist or fight back, though I did sense something was not right,” Y. revealed. One night, after another party came to an end, Y. drank to excess and could not drive her bike home. Her manager volunteered to take her home, but took her straight to a hotel. Following the incident, he considered Y. his own mistress, and did not hesitate to caress her any time he desired at work. The resentful young woman eventually quit her job. Q., a male office worker, also shared with Tuoi Tre his sexual harassment experience brought about by X., a female colleague. X. generally dons extremely tight-fitting, short skirts and blouses with collars open wide enough to reveal a large part of her bust. She tends to stand uncomfortably close to her male colleagues, and even adopts a titillating, nearly prone posture on the men’s desks. “Whenever she appears, I cannot focus on my work, as she is surrounded by male colleagues, who stare unblinkingly at her and crack obscene jokes. She also yells at them for their suggestive jokes and comments, creating such a disorderly scene,” Q., who works as a translator, lamented. Desperate for quiet, he had to retreat to a less frequented room corner, build a “bunker” with bulky dictionaries and flower vases, and wear headphones most of the time. His efforts are futile, however, as his work performance keeps going down. “It’s quite impossible to convince my bosses that my poor work performance is due to X.’s sexually arousing acts. But I’m verging on the breaking point,” he moaned. Another Tuoi Tre reader shared her experience, in which a middle-aged male colleague watched pornography on his laptop at maximum volume on a day when only the two of them were working late in the office. She distinctly heard the moans and other sounds from the film, putting her on edge. Thinking the man might not be aware of her presence, she purposefully made noise and pretended to talk on the cellphone to make it obvious he was not alone. But the moans persisted. She later found out that a number of sexually deviant people habitually satisfy their lust by forcing others to watch, read or hear porn materials with them. The woman also finds her boss and male colleagues’ explicit jokes and sex-related talks in her presence really disturbing. She later gave up her dream job after shockingly spotting a tiny camera secretly installed under her desk. The camera could clearly capture her thighs or even everything if she wore short skirts. Her reportage of the camera was met with disbelief and curious looks from the company’s leaders, who thought she was being paranoid. At her new workplace, she was frustrated to find rife sexual harassment which victimizes young women like her. According to psychologist Vo Thi Minh Hue, victims of sexual pestering tend to confuse the offence with casual jokes, which renders them unable to react properly and shield themselves. Hue has received many clients who are young women traumatized by sexual harassment at their workplace. Most of the victims suffer mounting anxiety, emotional disorders or even depression from such unsafe working environments. Hue urged young women to take drastic measures from the start to prevent the assaults from escalating. A code of conduct for the prevention of sexual harassment at workplaces was unveiled in Hanoi late last month by the Ministry of Labor, War Invalids, and Social Affairs (MOLISA) and the International Labor Organization (ILO) Office in Vietnam. The code, which is the first of its kind in Vietnam, is necessary as the current Labor Code, which has four articles relating to sexual harassment, has failed to provide a clear definition of sexual harassment, said Ha Dinh Bon, head of the ministry's Legislation Department. Therefore, the new code will help close this legal loophole in addressing the issue, Bon said. The code also serves as a foundation for employers to prepare policies or regulations that help promote healthy and secure working environments, he said. According to a report MOLISA and ILO released in 2012, most victims of sexual harassment in Vietnam were female workers aged between 18 and 30. However, many of them did not report such acts for different reasons, including fears for losing their job, the report said. MOLISA is planning to issue a decree next year to penalize people who sexually harass others at workplaces.
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