Female Navigation Officer Demands Right to Captain Ship

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A female navigation officer is suing a Russian shipping company for refusing to employ her as a ship’s captain.

Restriction on Women:

The Russian labour laws restricts women from performing more than 400 professions and 38 industries on the basis that they are too “arduous”, “dangerous” or “harmful” to women’s health, specifically their reproductive health.

The current list of jobs women are barred from, originally drawn up by the Soviet Union in 1974, stands at 456. Women are also prevented from driving trains, becoming carpenters, truck drivers or professional divers.

Denied job:

Svetlana Medvedeva, a navigation officer from Russia’s southeastern Samara region, applied for a job as a ship’s captain at Samara River Passenger Enterprise in 2012. But the company’s initial consent to hire her was withdrawn because of the law.

Denis Krivosheev, Amnesty International’s deputy director for Europe and Central Asia said, “For many years Svetlana Medvedeva has fought relentlessly to achieve her dream to stand at the helm of a river vessel,” said “However, the state, in the country that once pioneered women’s rights, continues to deny her this opportunity because of discriminatory restrictions”.

Jobs awarded based on exemption:

In 2000, the Russian Government amended the rules to allow for exemptions only if safe working conditions were established by the employer. After she was barred from taking the captain job, Ms Medvedeva challenged the rejection of her job application in court. She sought a judicial order to force the company to establish safe working conditions so she could work, but her claim was rejected.

United Nation’s support:

In 2013, Ms Medvedeva registered a complaint before the UN Committee on the Elimination of Discrimination against Women, arguing her rights had been violated because of her gender.

The committee found in favour of Ms Medvedeva and urged the Russian authorities to grant her compensation and allow her to take the job.

In July 2017, Russia’s Supreme Court ruled that her case should be re-opened. Her trial begins in Samara’s District Court on 31 August.

Mr Krivosheev said, “Russia was the first major European country to grant women suffrage in 1917. The first female ambassador, in 1923, was from Russia, and so was the first woman in space. It’s time the Russian authorities drew inspiration from these remarkable women and put an end to the shameful regulations that hold women back and perpetuate stereotypes”.

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Source: The Independent