<p>Peering through her binoculars at icebergs ahead, Diana Kidzhi shouts at the helmsman of a Russian nuclear-powered icebreaker approaching the North Pole: "Ten degrees left!"</p>.<p>At just 27, Kidzhi is a chief mate -- second in command to the captain -- and sets the path the giant vessel will take through the frozen waters of the Arctic Ocean.</p>.<p>Standing on the bridge of the ship, she is surrounded by screens relaying information from dozens of sensors. One tells her the thickness of the ice several kilometres away.</p>.<p>A tiny white spot appears in her binoculars. Kidzhi immediately identifies a polar bear and tells the bridge crew -- all men and many much older -- to slow down so the ship does not disturb its hunting.</p>.<p>They follow her command and the sound of ice cracking beneath the ship begins to fade.</p>.<p>Kidzhi is the most senior woman in Russia's growing nuclear icebreaker fleet -- owned by state atomic energy corporation Rosatom -- which Moscow hopes will secure its supremacy over the Arctic as climate change makes it more navigable.</p>.<p>One of three chief mates aboard the "50 Let Pobedy" ("50 Years of Victory"), Kidzhi is breaking stereotypes in a country where many male-dominated professions are still off limits to women.</p>.<p>There are nine other women on the ship, working in the kitchen, the infirmary and as cleaners.</p>.<p>The rest of the 95-strong crew are men, several of whom said they were not very happy taking orders from a woman.</p>.<p>But Kidzhi is reluctant to talk about sexism, focusing instead on her determination to excel at her job.</p>.<p>During four-hour shifts in the morning and evening, Kidzhi is in charge of the ship's heading as it sails through the Arctic for four months at a time.</p>.<p>Like most of the crew, Kidzhi is from Russia's second city and naval stronghold of Saint Petersburg.</p>.<p>As a child, she dreamed of working at sea.</p>.<p>Initially, she wanted to join the Russian navy. But while Saint Petersburg's Naval Institute was closed to women, another maritime university specialising in commercial shipping opened a course to women students just as she finished school.</p>.<p>"I took it as a sign. What's the point of knocking on a closed door when a path opens up in front of you," she says.</p>.<p>Shortly after graduating, she was invited to join an icebreaker fleet, "immediately falling in love".</p>.<p>In 2018, she joined the "50 Years of Victory" -- her first nuclear-powered ship.</p>.<p>She thrives on the "force you can feel" while operating the ship, which she says is incomparable to a diesel-powered vessel.</p>.<p>She quickly rose through the ranks on the icebreakers and has since sailed around the Arctic dozens of times and made nine voyages to the North Pole.</p>.<p>Kidzhi admits that when she first joined the ship, the crew looked at her with suspicion.</p>.<p>One of her fellow chief mates, 45-year-old Dmitry Nikitin, says she is setting a precedent.</p>.<p>"There are strong opponents of having a woman as part of the fleet. There is a feeling that a woman on a ship is bad luck," he says.</p>.<p>"But we are slowly coming out of this belief."</p>.<p>Sergei Barinov, a 56-year-old deck officer on the icebreaker, says it's Kidzhi's age -- not her gender -- that is exceptional.</p>.<p>He hopes new icebreakers currently being built by Moscow will employ more young Russians.</p>.<p>Rosatomflot told<em> AFP</em> that a woman is serving on another one of its vessels, the "Yamal", but as a deck officer so in a lower-ranked position than Kidzhi.</p>.<p>The chief mate of the "50 Years of Victory" meanwhile is dreaming big.</p>.<p>"I aim to become captain one day," Kidzhi says.</p>
<p>Peering through her binoculars at icebergs ahead, Diana Kidzhi shouts at the helmsman of a Russian nuclear-powered icebreaker approaching the North Pole: "Ten degrees left!"</p>.<p>At just 27, Kidzhi is a chief mate -- second in command to the captain -- and sets the path the giant vessel will take through the frozen waters of the Arctic Ocean.</p>.<p>Standing on the bridge of the ship, she is surrounded by screens relaying information from dozens of sensors. One tells her the thickness of the ice several kilometres away.</p>.<p>A tiny white spot appears in her binoculars. Kidzhi immediately identifies a polar bear and tells the bridge crew -- all men and many much older -- to slow down so the ship does not disturb its hunting.</p>.<p>They follow her command and the sound of ice cracking beneath the ship begins to fade.</p>.<p>Kidzhi is the most senior woman in Russia's growing nuclear icebreaker fleet -- owned by state atomic energy corporation Rosatom -- which Moscow hopes will secure its supremacy over the Arctic as climate change makes it more navigable.</p>.<p>One of three chief mates aboard the "50 Let Pobedy" ("50 Years of Victory"), Kidzhi is breaking stereotypes in a country where many male-dominated professions are still off limits to women.</p>.<p>There are nine other women on the ship, working in the kitchen, the infirmary and as cleaners.</p>.<p>The rest of the 95-strong crew are men, several of whom said they were not very happy taking orders from a woman.</p>.<p>But Kidzhi is reluctant to talk about sexism, focusing instead on her determination to excel at her job.</p>.<p>During four-hour shifts in the morning and evening, Kidzhi is in charge of the ship's heading as it sails through the Arctic for four months at a time.</p>.<p>Like most of the crew, Kidzhi is from Russia's second city and naval stronghold of Saint Petersburg.</p>.<p>As a child, she dreamed of working at sea.</p>.<p>Initially, she wanted to join the Russian navy. But while Saint Petersburg's Naval Institute was closed to women, another maritime university specialising in commercial shipping opened a course to women students just as she finished school.</p>.<p>"I took it as a sign. What's the point of knocking on a closed door when a path opens up in front of you," she says.</p>.<p>Shortly after graduating, she was invited to join an icebreaker fleet, "immediately falling in love".</p>.<p>In 2018, she joined the "50 Years of Victory" -- her first nuclear-powered ship.</p>.<p>She thrives on the "force you can feel" while operating the ship, which she says is incomparable to a diesel-powered vessel.</p>.<p>She quickly rose through the ranks on the icebreakers and has since sailed around the Arctic dozens of times and made nine voyages to the North Pole.</p>.<p>Kidzhi admits that when she first joined the ship, the crew looked at her with suspicion.</p>.<p>One of her fellow chief mates, 45-year-old Dmitry Nikitin, says she is setting a precedent.</p>.<p>"There are strong opponents of having a woman as part of the fleet. There is a feeling that a woman on a ship is bad luck," he says.</p>.<p>"But we are slowly coming out of this belief."</p>.<p>Sergei Barinov, a 56-year-old deck officer on the icebreaker, says it's Kidzhi's age -- not her gender -- that is exceptional.</p>.<p>He hopes new icebreakers currently being built by Moscow will employ more young Russians.</p>.<p>Rosatomflot told<em> AFP</em> that a woman is serving on another one of its vessels, the "Yamal", but as a deck officer so in a lower-ranked position than Kidzhi.</p>.<p>The chief mate of the "50 Years of Victory" meanwhile is dreaming big.</p>.<p>"I aim to become captain one day," Kidzhi says.</p>