Pakistan's Women Fighter Pilots

by Rajshri on  March 09, 2010 at 7:52 PM Lifestyle News
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She and 26-year-old Flight Lieutenant Nadia Gul say PAF is a trailblazer for women's rights. As respected officers with a 60,000-rupee-a-month (700-dollar) salary, they are living out their dreams.

"It's a profession of passion. One has to be extremely motivated. I love flying. I love to fly fighter jets, to do something for my country that is very unique," smiled Ambreen, her hair stuffed into a pony tail.

Signing up aged 18, only a handful of girls beat homesickness and stiff competition to pass a six-month selection process and graduate after three-and-a-half years of training.

"It was the toughest time we've ever faced," Ambreen remembers.

During a training flight on a Chinese-made F-7, she once blacked out for a few seconds before survival reflexes kicked in.

Nadia, whose army captain husband is serving on the front line of Pakistan's war against the Taliban in the wind-swept mountains of Swat, won a prize for academic achievement at PAF's first women fighter pilot graduation.

"It was the first time. It was history," she remembers, a bottle-green hijab covering most of her hair and tucked into her padded pilot's jacket.

"I was just a girl who went to college and came back home, but now I'm in a great profession," said Nadia.

Commanding male subordinates, they bat aside any question of sexism or men who don't take kindly to being ordered about by a woman.

They love the respect that comes with official fighter pilot status in the armed forces -- the wealthiest institution in Pakistan.

"Families are very fascinated. Everyone's very impressed," says Nadia, describing her husband as "very supportive" and "proud".

Forbes ranked Pakistan in 2010 as the fourth most dangerous country in the world. Officers say only a tiny elite -- and no women -- actually fly in combat in Pakistan's tribal belt, a battleground against Al-Qaeda and the Taliban.

While PAF is outwardly very proud of its women pilots, some wonder privately whether women are strong enough to reach the top of the profession.

But flying transport and cargo planes, ferrying VIPs like cabinet ministers around the country, Nadia feels women's lot is improving and takes issue with Western perceptions of Pakistan as backward.

"PAF are giving us this chance on an equal basis. It was really a bold step that the Pakistan Air Force has taken in recruiting lady fighter pilots," she said.

In a country where extended family is important and most middle-class women rely on servants for household work and child-minding, Ambreen and Nadia may be saved some of the problems faced by women in the West.

They believe marriage and -- in the future -- motherhood can complement, not replace, a career, "provided you have a supportive family".

Source-AFP
RAS
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