Paul
Goble
Staunton, February 26 – In contrast
to the United States where ever more people are speaking out against the harassment
of women by men in positions of power, in Russia, some women close to the
powers that be are defending their male colleagues’ supposed right to make
unwelcome advances.
In a commentary entitled “Harassment
is Not a Russian Word,” Igor Yakovenko says that the Women’s Club of the
Russian State Duma has responded to Times Up, the American movement against
harassment by staking out what can only be called the most retrograde of
positions (kasparov.ru/material.php?id=5A93C5116847B).
Russians were slow
to respond to the American movement because they really had not idea what “harassment”
is, the Russian commentator says. They went to their dictionaries and learned
that it came from the French; but they remained unclear as to why such things
were a problem for anyone.
And they were pleased that “Putin
explained everything” they thought they needed to know: “’A real man,’” the
Kremlin leader said, “’must always try, but a girl must always resist.’ End of
citation. What could be unclear? And you [Americans] shout: ‘harassment! Harassment!’
The president has made everything clear.”
While the American and European
media were full of stories about harassment, “the Russian leadership mostly
remained silent.” But that changed when
a Dozhd television correspondent, Elizaveta Antonova, reported that she and her
colleagues has “more than once complained” about sexual harassment by LDPR
deputy Leonid Slutsky.
Instead of taking their charges seriously,
including that they couldn’t do interviews with him without his making unwanted
advances, the Women’s Club of the Russian State Duma rushed … to his
defense. Attacks on Slutsky, it declared,
were “a planned provocation” and “information aggression,” among other dismissive
and derogatory terms.
It is sometimes suggested, Yakovenko
says, that having women in the Duma causes the Russian legislature to be more
humane. But “apparently,” Russia “has become an exception to the rules” that
obtain elsewhere, with some of “the most draconian and obscurantist laws” on
the books bearing the name of deputies Irina Yarovaya and Yelena Mizulina.
According to the Moscow commentator,
“the list of women in various branches of power who by their actions are making
the regime harsher and also promoting discrimination against women can be
extended almost at will,” as the latest statement of the Duma’s Women’s Club
confirms.
Tragically, he concludes, “the
Russian power structure today is a poisonous milieu. Each who becomes part of
it and who wants to survive is forced to give him his or her essential
humanity. Women among the Russian authorities
are alas no exception.”
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