Close X
Monday, November 25, 2024
ADVT 
National

Marc Garneau Calls Out Airline Qatar Airways CEO For Saying Women Can't Do His Job

The Canadian Press, 08 Jun, 2018 01:02 PM
    OTTAWA — Canada's transport minister is calling out the newly installed chairman of a global airline association for saying that his job as head of Qatar Airways would be too difficult for a woman to perform.
     
     
    Qatar CEO Akbar Al Baker made the controversial comments earlier this week after being selected as chairman of the board of governors of the International Air Transport Association, which has its head office in Montreal.
     
     
    He subsequently backtracked and apologized for saying his company "has to be led by a man, because it is a very challenging position" — his original answer to a question about the lack of gender diversity in the airline industry.
     
     
    Transport Minister Marc Garneau is taking Al Baker to task in a letter to the CEO of the airline association.
     
     
     
     
    Garneau says the comments work against efforts to increase the number of women not only as pilots, but also in senior management positions in an industry where they have been traditionally under-represented.
     
     
    "Pursuing gender equality should be a given," Garneau writes, calling Al Baker's comments "unproductive and unacceptable."
     
     
    The letter doesn't say whether Canada would take any further actions in response.

    MORE National ARTICLES

    Hundreds of Fort McMurray Insurance Claims Unresolved Two Years After Wildfire

    "This is unprecedented, not just for the people of Wood Buffalo, but for our industry," Bill Adams, with the Insurance Bureau of Canada, said Wednesday.

    Hundreds of Fort McMurray Insurance Claims Unresolved Two Years After Wildfire

    Sex Assault Supports Vary In B.C. Universities A Year After Provincial Bill

    One year after a bill came into effect requiring British Columbia universities to have sexual assault policies, the supports available at different schools still vary widely and students are urging the province to fill a funding gap.

    Sex Assault Supports Vary In B.C. Universities A Year After Provincial Bill

    Kids Still Being Locked Up, Held Down In B.C. Schools: Advocacy Group

    Kids Still Being Locked Up, Held Down In B.C. Schools: Advocacy Group
    VANCOUVER — An advocacy group says children in British Columbia are still being held down and confined in locked rooms, despite calls to change how educators address student behaviour.

    Kids Still Being Locked Up, Held Down In B.C. Schools: Advocacy Group

    Thunderstorms Expected To Add To Flood Woes In South-Central British Columbia

    GRAND FORKS, B.C. — Federal help is on the way for flooded communities in south-central British Columbia as they brace for more high water caused by rapidly melting snowpacks and potentially heavy rain.

    Thunderstorms Expected To Add To Flood Woes In South-Central British Columbia

    B.C. Securities Regulator Warns About Investing In Cryptocurrencies

    VANCOUVER — British Columbia's securities regulator has joined its Ontario counterpart in issuing a warning about investing in cryptocurrencies amid worries the lightly regulated market is ripe for possible financial scams.

    B.C. Securities Regulator Warns About Investing In Cryptocurrencies

    Canadians Gather In Churches, Theatres, Halls For Royal Wedding Viewing Parties

    Canadians Gather In Churches, Theatres, Halls For Royal Wedding Viewing Parties
    BRENTWOOD BAY, B.C. — Donna Otto hasn't decided on wearing a fascinator or a new hat on Prince Harry and Meghan Markle's wedding day, but she knows where she'll be at 4 a.m. on Saturday when the royal couple say their 'I dos.'

    Canadians Gather In Churches, Theatres, Halls For Royal Wedding Viewing Parties