Praca w Stoczni Gdańskiej - AFP
EN_01673685_0549
TO GO WITH AFP STORY by Bernard OSSER
Halina Krauze, 65, a overhead crane operator, sits in her cabin of an overhead crane at the production hall of the Gdansk Shipyard in Gdansk, Poland, on March 6, 2026. "Around 70% of crane operators on construction sites today are women," Krause explains, a tradition inherited from the communist era. The shipyard, known as the birthplace of the Solidarnosc trade union that led to the fall of communism in Poland in 1989, still builds some ships but today, mainly wind turbines are produced at the site. (Photo by Wojtek RADWANSKI / AFP)
2026-03-06
WOJTEK RADWANSKI/AFP/East News
AFP
WOJTEK RADWANSKI
AFP_A2CC8CU
15,15MB
68cm x 45cm by 300dpi
1989, 2026, 6, 65, 70, A, AFP, AN, ARE, AROUND, AS, AT, BIRTHPLACE, BUILDS, BUT, BY, CABIN, COMMUNISM, COMMUNIST, CONSTRUCTION, CRANE, ERA, ESSENTIAL, EXPLAINS, FALL, FROM, GDANSK, HALINA, HALL, HER, HORIZONTAL, IN, INHERITED, KNOWN, KRAUSE, KRAUZE, LED, MAINLY, MARCH, OF, ON, OPERATOR, OPERATORS, OVERHEAD, PHOTO, POLAND, PRODUCED, PRODUCTION, RADWANSKI, SHIPS, SHIPYARD, SITE, SITES, SITS, SOLIDARNOSC, SOME, STILL, THAT, THE, TO, TODAY, TRADE, TRADITION, TURBINES, UNION, WIND, WOJTEK, WOMEN,