What does the board feel about India's decision - let women fly, as long as they promise not to get pregnant? Now, on the one hand, it certainly seems unfair - after all, make fighter pilots are allowed to have children - but on the other hand, I can also see where the Air Force is coming from - I would certainly feel annoyed if I spend millions of dollars training someone for a specialised role that was important for national security, and then they went off and made a decision that would stop them from fulfilling any of their duties.Adelaide Now wrote:Air force under fire over 'no babies' rule
THE Indian Air Force has drawn flak from women activists after it suggested it might allow female pilots to fly fighter jets but only if they promised not to have babies.
The air force, which in 1994 allowed women to fly transport planes and helicopters, argued pregnancy could cause millions of dollars worth of lost training.
Women's forums attacked air force deputy chief P K Barbora who made the suggestion at a news conference yesterday.
"India is a democratic country and such regressive comments are only a reflection of the patriarchical mindset of the decision makers," said Anju Dubey of Delhi-based Centre for Social Research forum.
"Today, we are talking about equal opportunities as guaranteed by our constitution ... this is unconstitutional," she said.
The Indian air force in 2005 court-martialled a pilot for indiscipline after she accused her superiors of sexually harassing her. The year before three female rookie fliers were fired when they levelled similar charges.
Campaign group Apne Aap Women Worldwide questioned Mr Barbora's conditions and warned the controversy could snowball.
"It is a very adverse stand and will not go down well with women groups because we do not think childbirth has anything to do with investments in women's training," activist Anjali Pathak said.
"This is discriminatory because who is the state to decide our choice on childbirth?" she added.
Mr Barbora said the airforce spent 116 million rupees ($2.47 million) to train each of its fighter pilots, which could go to waste if a women flier decided to have babies.
"Anyone can fly a fighter but the issue is that after spending so much, then not being able to utilise women operationally would not be a prudent thing," he said.
"If we do take them as fighter pilots, there could be pre-conditions," he said.
"We request you to be happy, be married, and let us hope that you don't have offspring," Mr Barbora said, an apparent message to pilots hoping to fly combat planes.
India's first woman president Pratibha Patil will fly in a supersonic Sukhoi-30 fighter jet next week.
I feel that the issue does highlight one of the major issues with gender equality though: all other things being equal, an employer is always taking a greater risk when hiring a young, childless woman than when hiring a young, childless man. Sure, in plenty of countries, the father can elect to stay home and raise the children, but the physical aspects of the pregnancy will always be the woman's to bear, and this will invariably impact on her work in some way.
So the question is, are such restrictions on childbirth by potential employers ethical? Would your opinion on the ethics of such restrictions change if the country was:
a) still a strongly patriarchal country like India
b) a country where women's child-bearing were already regulated so that a period as a fighter pilot would not hamper a woman's ability to have the maximum number of children she could, should she so desire (like China)
c) a country which in other areas ranked quite highly on issues involving gender equality?