Apart from the customary mandated paid sick and vacation leaves, a
Russian lawmaker has asked parliament to give women two days paid leave a
month when they menstruate, a move that has irked rights activists
worried over creeping conservatism since Vladimir Putin resumed the
presidency.
Mikhail Degtyaryov, a member of the nationalist LDPR party led by the
outspoken Vladimir Zhirinovsky, wrote on his website “During that
period (of menstruation), most women experience psychological and
physiological discomfort. The pain for the fair sex is often so intense
that it is necessary to call an ambulance,” said Degtyaryov, 32, who is
married with two sons.
Pain
Degtyaryov, a candidate in a Moscow mayoral election on September 8,
who is polling at less than one percent support, said pain during
menstruation heightened fatigue, reduced memory and efficiency at work,
and provoked distinct emotional discomfort.
“Strong pain induces heightened fatigue, reduces memory and
work-competence and leads to colourful expressions of emotional
discomfort,” a portion of Degtyaryov‘s proposed bill published on his
personal Web site said.
“Therefore, scientists and gynaecologists look on difficult menstruation not only as a medical, but also a social problem.”
The State Duma lower house of parliament does not meet again until
September but human rights campaigners have already dismissed the
proposal as sexist.
“This argument is obviously improper, unreasonable and nothing close
to being serious,” said Anna Sobko, a lawyer at Memorial, Russia‘s
oldest human rights group.
However, Andrei Isaev, a member of the incumbent United Russia party
and the head of the Duma‘s Labour, Social Politics and Veteran Affairs
Committee, said the legislation was absurd.
Marina Pisklakova-Parker, head of women‘s group Anna Center, said the proposal was absurd.
“If we are seriously debating women‘s efficiency at work during
menstruation, we should also consider how fit for work men are after a
drinking bout,” she said.
Rights activists said they did not see the Kremlin‘s hand behind the
proposal. But the opposition says there has been a drift towards more
conservatism attitudes in Russian politics since Putin returned to the
presidency in May last year and started courting the resurgent Russian
Orthodox Church.
Parliament has since then enacted what critics see as a series of
repressive laws, including one banning “homosexual propaganda” which has
been widely condemned in the West.
No more drama in the office
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