Saodat Shermatova “cried with joy” after Uzbekistan, a predominantly Muslim former Soviet republic, last month lifted a ban on women working as bus drivers.
“I was waiting a long time,” said the 49-year-old, who used to work in public transport maintenance in the Uzbek capital, Tashkent.
Shermatova now drives the number 51, an electric bus, around Tashkent — the biggest city in Central Asia with a population of 3 million.
Photo: AFP
She said her husband, also a bus driver, was concerned at first, but has given her “full support” although he “tells me every day to be careful.”
Seeing a female bus driver is an unusual sight in Uzbekistan — a highly patriarchal country of about 35 million people.
“At first, a lot of people looked at me in shock. Some men asked me if it wasn’t too difficult for me. Others stayed silent but looked disapproving,” she said.
“But I’m not worried. I receive a lot more encouragement and congratulations,” she said.
Before she started driving the 51, Shermatova trained for several days with her 69-year-old colleague, Makhmud Mislimov.
“It’s a very good thing that women are allowed to drive buses, particularly since the vehicles are now more practical and less heavy than in Soviet times,” he said.
He said women used to drive buses in the Soviet era under certain conditions.
Across Central Asia, independence from the Soviet Union in 1991 led to a much more conservative attitude to the role of women in society. There had been greater equality between the sexes under communism.
Women in Central Asia are still barred from many professions, including the raw materials sector.
“In Uzbekistan, it was forbidden for women to drive trucks of more than 2.5 tonnes and vehicles carrying more than 14 people,” Uzbek transport ministry spokesman Nodir Khudoiberdiyev said.
“The government lifted these restrictions to allow women to work,” he said.
The reform is in line with the gradual liberalization seen under Uzbek President Shavkat Mirziyoyev, who has been in charge of a tightly controlled regime with no real political opposition since 2016.
In another important reform, the Uzbek parliament has voted through a law imposing a 40 percent quota of female candidates in parliamentary elections. It is an attempt to balance out a political scene in which women are largely absent except for Saida Mirziyoyeva, the president’s daughter.
The UN said a report in 2020 that, while the Uzbek government was taking steps toward tackling inequality, there was little change in the daily lives of most women.
However, that might be changing.
Nargiza Gadoyeva, 57, so far Uzbekistan’s only other female bus driver, said she jumped at the chance of a new role.
“At the beginning I was anxious. My children were opposed to me driving a bus, but I persevered,” the former driving instructor said.
She said the initial concern has been outweighed by the numerous congratulations she has received.
“I think my case will motivate other women to drive. I want to be an example for Uzbek women, to show that we are capable of many things,” Gadoyeva said.
“You have to believe in yourself and your own strength. The main thing is to be patient and confident. Then everything else will come,” she said.
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