The Borneo Post (Sabah)

Woman among five pilots flying Sinovac vaccine to M’sia

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SEPANG: “I am very proud and overwhelme­d,” said Nur Waie Hidayah Mohamad Rasidin, one of the five pilots and the only female pilot responsibl­e for navigating Flight MH319 carrying the first batch of Sinovac vaccine from China to Malaysia yesterday.

Nur Waie Hidayah, 23, said she was proud to be able to break male dominance in aviation industry.

“There is no difference being a male or female (pilot). We were all given the same training and went through the same procedure,” she told Bernama after landing the plane at the Kuala Lumpur Internatio­nal Airport (KLIA) here.

The envirotain­er - a temperatur­e-controlled container - with 200 litres of the vaccine arrived at 9 am at KLIA from Beijing in the Malaysia Airlines

Airbus 330-300 aircraft, bearing the livery of the Jalur Gemilang (national flag).

Nur Waie Hidayah, who joins Malaysia Airlines in 2017, said the passenger-to-cargo flight had left Beijing Capital Internatio­nal Airport at 2.30 am (Malaysian time).

Nur Waie Hidayah said the team had been making preparatio­ns for the past five months, including learning about the envirotain­er which is able to maintain a temperatur­e of between 2 to 8 degrees Celsius.

The other four pilots are Datuk Captain Tengku Ahmad Farizanude­an Al-Haj, Chin Vun Ben, Captain Mohamed Razif Abdul Aziz and Captain Khairul Syukri Khali.

Meanwhile, Mohamed Razif, 53, said five pilots were given the responsibi­lity to navigate the twoway flight due to safety factor.

He explained that the flight had left Kuala Lumpur at 7 pm Friday and arrived in Beijing at 1 am.

“The vaccine was loaded straight away and we flew back from Beijing at 2.30 am,” he said.

The Selangor native said the loading work took quite a long time because the temperatur­e in Beijing was below 0 degrees Celsius on Friday.

Despite having 31 years of experience in the world of aviation, he admitted that he was a little worried because he did not want anything untoward to happen.

The Sinovac vaccine is the second Covid-19 vaccine to arrive in Malaysia after the PfizerBioN­Tech vaccine.

 ?? - Bernama photo ?? Nur Waie (second left) and the other four Malaysia Airlines pilots who flew the Sinovac vaccine from Beijing to Malaysia yesterday.
- Bernama photo Nur Waie (second left) and the other four Malaysia Airlines pilots who flew the Sinovac vaccine from Beijing to Malaysia yesterday.

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