Yorkshire Post

RAF opens up all its roles to women

Defence chief hails ‘defining moment’

- GRACE HAMMOND NEWS CORRESPOND­ENT Email: yp.newsdesk@ypn.co.uk Twitter: @yorkshirep­ost

DEFENCE: The Royal Air Force has become the first military service to open up all roles to men and women.

Women can now apply to join the RAF’s ground-fighting force after the Government lifted the ban on females serving in close combat roles. The RAF Regiment is deployed to protect bases and airfields across the world.

THE Royal Air Force has become the first military service to open up all roles to men and women.

Women can now apply to join the RAF’s ground-fighting force after the Government lifted the ban on females serving in close combat roles.

The 2,000-strong RAF Regiment is deployed to protect bases and airfields across the world, and has sustained casualties in Afghanista­n.

Defence Secretary Sir Michael Fallon said the change would lead to a more effective military when he announced the move in July.

“Individual­s who are capable of meeting the standards for the regiment will be given the opportunit­y to serve, regardless of their gender,” he said.

“This is a defining moment for the RAF.”

However, Colonel Richard Kemp, a former commander of British forces in Afghanista­n, said he was strongly opposed to plans to allow women to serve in the infantry from next year.

He said: “My concern is primarily in terms of physical capabiliti­es and the effects that long-term stresses and strains of infantry training and operations will have on a woman’s body.

“Once you have got through the selection, you then are sub- jecting yourself to a minimum of four years of intensive physical training day in and day out, which puts enough of a strain on a man’s body.

“I think the reality is we will find many more women than men suffer injuries... and we will then undoubtedl­y see very significan­t compensati­on payments being made out of the defence budget.

“And the nature of women’s bodies means that some of the injuries are going to be more significan­t in terms of being able to bear children and the like.

“I am not a doctor, but I have certainly read up on this and that is a problem.”

But former British Army major Judith Webb argued that women had been proven to be capable in such roles.

She said: “We want to promote diversity and get the best people, and if we have got women who want to do it, who are capable of doing it – then of course they should be able to do it.”

At present, women make up 10 per cent of the RAF.

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