Egyptian refugee engineer faced discrimination

  • Published
Image of Shrouk El-Attar working in a electronics laboratoryImage source, Shrouk El-Attar
Image caption,

Shrouk El-Attar was a finalist in the Institute of Engineering and Technology's women engineer of the year award.

A former refugee said she struggled against gender and racial discrimination in the tech industry.

Shrouk El-Attar, 27, from Bristol, said despite the discrimination, she wanted to "fight for equality in tech".

Jo Foster, from the Institution of Engineering and Technology (IET) said equality in the sector "is a problem".

Miss El-Attar spoke after she was named as a finalist for the IET woman engineer of the year award.

According to a report from Engineering UK, external, just 12% of those working in engineering occupations are women.

Image source, Getty Images
Image caption,

According to a report from Engineering UK 12% of those working in engineering occupations are women.

Miss El-Attar has been working in the tech industry as and engineer and ambassador since 2011, having come to the UK as a refugee in 2007 to escape persecution in Egypt.

She currently designs electronic circuits for industrial robotics at Renishaw.

She said there was not a "right or wrong way" to "look like an engineer".

"I want to honour every little refugee girl who was told that she can't be a mathematician, scientist, or an engineer because she escaped war, conflict, and persecution." she added.

"Hostile environment"

Miss El-Attar said the "hostile environment" the Home Office had created in the UK did not allow refugees and asylum seekers to be a "part of society" and share their skills.

"For six or seven years I wasn't able to study engineering, leave the country, work or do many things.

"Yet, at the moment in the UK we have a massive engineering shortage."

She was recognised for her efforts and was nominated as a finalist for the IET woman engineer of the year award on Thursday.

Miss Foster congratulated her and said there was a "lack of role models for girls" in the industry.

She said the nominees for the awards "demonstrate the tremendous female engineering talent in our industry today".

Related internet links

The BBC is not responsible for the content of external sites.