Beauty pageant for female prison wardens in Russia - with guards made to dance and parade in uniforms and evening gowns - sparks fury

  • uniforms and evening wear by a mostly-male jury and internet poll 
  • They also submit a video showing them dancing and glamourising their job 
  • But campaigners have attacked the contest for 'objectifying women'A beauty pageant for female Russian prison officers has been blasted by activists for 'objectifying women'.

    The Miss Penal System Contest 2021 sees female guards from across Russia submit a short video in which they are expected to dance, glamourise their profession, advertise the beauty of their region, and pretend they are a museum object.

    They also submit photographs of themselves in their prison uniform and in evening wear that will be judged by a mostly-male panel as well as in an online poll before a winner is picked.

    Nastya Krasilnikova, a women's rights campaigner, branded the event 'sad' and said it encourages people to see the contestants as mere objects - 'that can be admired, that can be lusted after, but that are not interesting in any other way.'
  •  Veronika Shved


    Veronika Shved, a prison officer from the Chelyabinsk region near the border with Kazakhstan, poses in uniform and evening wear as part of the beauty pageant

    Tatiana Gritsaenko
    Tatiana Gritsaenko

    Tatiana Gritsaenko, a prison officer from the Saratov region near the city of Volgograd, poses for photos submitted as part of the beauty contest

    Anastasia Okolelova
    Anastasia Okolelova

    Anastasia Okolelova, from the Samara region on the Volga river, is current in second place in an internet poll to find 'Miss Penal System 2021'

     Among the contestants is Senior lieutenant Anastasia Okolelova, from Samara, said she had dreamed since childhood of 'wearing shoulder straps' and serving in the prison force.

    She is currently in second place in the internet poll.

    Captain Ekaterina Vasilieva, from Vladimir region, wanted to be a fashion model but then decided to follow her family's tradition and become the third generation to be a jail guard.

    She is also a professional horse rider.

    Lt Diana Sat, a native of the mountainous Tuva republic in Siberia, was leading today in the internet voting.

    She joined the service last year after graduating from law college, and posed as a prehistoric queen.

    Senior Lieutenant Yulia Osokin is from Dimitrovgrad, Ulyanovsk region, where she says every family has a relative who is in an employee of the penal system.

    Lt Yana Kondrashova serves on Russia's largest island Sakhalin and served in a platoon of drummers when she studied at the Academy of the Federal Penitentiary Service.

  • Diana Sat
    Diana Sat

    Lt Diana Sat, a native of the mountainous Tuva republic in Siberia, was leading today in the internet voting

    Indira Farsina
    Indira Farsina

    Indira Farsina, from Tatarstan, is in third place in internet voting and counts Coco Chanel among her idols

    Ekaterina Vasilieva
    Ekaterina Vasilieva

    Ekaterina Vasilieva, from the Vladimir region near Moscow, wanted to be a model before following her family into the prison service - according to her profile

    Yana Kondrashova
    Yana Kondrashova

    Yana Kondrashova from the Sakhalin region on Russia's far eastern coast, near Japan, poses for photographs submitted to the competition

    Dayia Tarasevich
    Dayia Tarasevich

    Lt Dayia Tarasevich, from the Ivanovo region, said from childhood she wanted 'to stand guard over the law' 

    Lt Darya Stroganova, a law graduate, was posted to work in the Arctic city of Murmansk.

    Senior Lieutenant Indira Farsina, from Tatarstan, in third place in the internet voting, said she is guided by the dictum of Coco Chanel: 'Everything is in our hands, so they cannot be omitted.'

    Senior Lieutenant Valeria Agoyan, from Ulyanovsk region, graduated three years ago and now works at a female penal colony in Kurgan region.

    Senior Lieutenant Veronika Shved, from Zlatoust, is a champion mogul skier.

    Lt Tatiana Gritsaenko combines working as a warder with singing.

    Ensign Veronika Unzhakov studied for a degree in Jurisprudence before entering the prison service in Kemerovo region, Siberia.

    Lt Dayia Tarasevich said from childhood she wanted 'to stand guard over the law'.

    The final judging will take place in Moscow on Friday night.

    Ms Krasilnikova said ahead of the event: 'Although they are wearing uniforms, these photos are about so-called beauty.

    'Why is objectifying bad? Because it teaches to treat women as objects, not living individuals.

    'As objects that can be admired, that can be lusted after, but that are not interesting in any other way... It is sad and bitter.'

    Valeria Agoyan
    Valeria Agoyan

    Senior Lieutenant Valeria Agoyan, from Ulyanovsk region, graduated three years ago and now works at a female penal colony in Kurgan region

    Darya Stroganova
    Darya Stroganova

    Lt Darya Stroganova, a law graduate, was posted to work in the Arctic city of Murmansk

    Veronika Unzhakova
    Veronika Unzhakova

    Ensign Veronika Unzhakov studied for a degree in Jurisprudence before entering the prison service in Kemerovo region, Siberia

    Yulia Osokina
    Yulia Osokina

    Yulia Osokin, from Dimitrovgrad in the Ulyanovsk region, and says every family in the area has a relative who is in an employee of the penal system

3 comments:

  1. there was only one jacket so they had to take turns wearing it for their photos.

    ReplyDelete
  2. Nastya Krasilnikova, a women's rights campaigner, branded the event 'sad' and said it encourages people to see the contestants as mere objects - 'that can be admired, that can be lusted after, but that are not interesting in any other way.' You say that like it's a bad thing.

    ReplyDelete

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