Close X
Tuesday, November 26, 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

    Vancouver's 8th Homicide Of 2018: One Man Dead After Early Morning Assault In Yaletown Park

    Vancouver's 8th Homicide Of 2018: One Man Dead After Early Morning Assault In Yaletown Park
    Vancouver has recorded its eighth homicide of the year after a man died following what police believe was an attack in a park in the city's Yaletown neighbourhood.

    Vancouver's 8th Homicide Of 2018: One Man Dead After Early Morning Assault In Yaletown Park

    Mosque Shooter Couldn't Believe Man He Shot Seven Times Survived: Fellow Inmate

    Mosque Shooter Couldn't Believe Man He Shot Seven Times Survived: Fellow Inmate
    Quebec City mosque shooter Alexandre Bissonnette told a fellow inmate he couldn't believe a man he pumped seven bullets into didn't die, a Crown prosecutor told his sentencing arguments Wednesday.

    Mosque Shooter Couldn't Believe Man He Shot Seven Times Survived: Fellow Inmate

    Van Attack Puts Spotlight On Violent Sentiment In 'INCEL' Community: Expert

    TORONTO — A message allegedly posted by the accused in Toronto's deadly van attack is shedding light on a mostly male online community that an expert says endorses violent rhetoric against women.

    Van Attack Puts Spotlight On Violent Sentiment In 'INCEL' Community: Expert

    Halifax Cartoonists Capture Public Mood Following Toronto, Humboldt Tragedies

    Halifax Cartoonists Capture Public Mood Following Toronto, Humboldt Tragedies
    Halifax cartoonist Michael de Adder says he was simply trying to find a small bit of positivity with an image that has garnered national attention for its depiction of recent tragedies in Toronto and Humboldt, Sask.

    Halifax Cartoonists Capture Public Mood Following Toronto, Humboldt Tragedies

    Pilot Likely Disoriented In Plane Crash That Killed Former Alberta Premier Jim Prentice

    Pilot Likely Disoriented In Plane Crash That Killed Former Alberta Premier Jim Prentice
    The Cessna Citation jet went down shortly after takeoff from Kelowna, B.C., on its way to the Springbank airport west of Calgary in October 2016.

    Pilot Likely Disoriented In Plane Crash That Killed Former Alberta Premier Jim Prentice

    Cop Who Arrested Accused In Van Attack Doesn't Want To Be Hailed As Hero

    A Toronto police officer who has earned international acclaim for the peaceful arrest of a man accused in a deadly van attack does not want to be hailed as a hero.

    Cop Who Arrested Accused In Van Attack Doesn't Want To Be Hailed As Hero