Women take driver's seat on trains as Russia eases gender restrictions

Female drivers inside the cabin of a train in Moscow. Russia has shortened the list of jobs it bars women from holding because of their physical demands or hazardous nature, allowing them to become metro drivers, train conductors and lorry drivers. P
Female drivers inside the cabin of a train in Moscow. Russia has shortened the list of jobs it bars women from holding because of their physical demands or hazardous nature, allowing them to become metro drivers, train conductors and lorry drivers. PHOTO: MOSCOW TRANSPORT DEPARTMENT

MOSCOW • Muscovite Sofia Dorofeyeva had always been drawn to the trains travelling across the vast expanses of her native Russia, but until this year, she and her female compatriots had been barred from occupying the driver's seat.

Russia, from Jan 1, shortened the list of jobs it bars women from holding because of their physical demands or hazardous nature, allowing them to become metro drivers, train conductors and lorry drivers.

After graduating last year from a college that trains public transportation workers, Ms Dorofeyeva eagerly awaited the start of the new year to become an assistant train driver.

"All of us women who wanted to get this job had been waiting for a very long time," said the 21-year-old, who for years had been sketching anime-like illustrations of trains and female conductors, foreshadowing her profession.

"At first we couldn't believe it, but then of course we felt great joy as well as a sense of calm. Instead of fighting, we can finally just take this job after passing our exams."

The battle for Russian women to have access to professions deemed too demanding or hazardous by the state began long before Ms Dorofeyeva's time.

In 2009, Ms Anna Klevets, a student in the city of St Petersburg, responded to an advertisement on the metro calling on men to apply to become assistant metro train drivers.

When her application was rejected because of her gender, Ms Klevets took her case to court.

It eventually reached the Constitutional Court in 2012, but women remained barred from operating metro trains.

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Muscovite Sofia Dorofeyeva had always been drawn to the trains travelling across the vast expanses of her native Russia but until this year she and her female compatriots had been barred from occupying the driver's seat.

"I understood that it would be a long process," she told Reuters.

"But of course I didn't think it would take 10 years."

Ms Klevets has been pleased to see her legal battle stir debate, even though scores of professions, including some that require exposure to explosives and chemicals, remain out of reach for Russian women.

"Everything should be available (to women)," Ms Klevets said.

"Because a woman can decide on her own what to choose, where to go, who to be and what to do."

REUTERS

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A version of this article appeared in the print edition of The Straits Times on January 22, 2021, with the headline Women take driver's seat on trains as Russia eases gender restrictions. Subscribe