Emirati women scale new heights in aviation
Etihad employees share their experiences at event held to celebrate Emirati Women’s Day
The glass ceiling may be real everywhere, but Emirati women shattered it years ago in the field of aviation, a group of women pioneers said in the capital yesterday.
Reaching the ranks of pilots, managers and senior executives, Emirati women are continuing to demonstrate their versatility, and remain models of the UAE’s full support towards women empowerment, they said at a panel convened by Etihad Airways to celebrate Emirati Women’s Day.
“When I interviewed to become a pilot, I had to answer one of the most commonplace questions posed to professional women everywhere: How will you balance your career with family? I told my interviewers that I would excel in both, and who knew, I might even find a husband within the company,” Salma Al Beloushi, 30, first officer at Etihad, told Gulf News .Al Beloushi’s prediction came true. Five years ago she piloted her first flight to Athens. The following year, she married an aircraft engineer she met at Etihad. Now, the mother of two children, she is one of 13 pilots at Etihad.
At present, 51.2 per cent of all Emirati employees at the airline are women. 295 of these women are engineers and technicians, 237 are managers, and 32 work in senior management.
The seeds of women empowerment were laid by the nation’s founding father, Shaikh Zayed, said Fathiya Al Nizari, 50, longterm volunteer at the Emirates Red Crescent, long-serving member of the General Women’s Union and one-time member of Shaikh Zayed’s personal office.
“I still remember accompanying our wise leader and the Mother of the Nation, Her Highness Shaikha Fatima Bint Mubarak, as they actively travelled the country, by road and by air, meeting women to find out where and what they needed. Today’s women achievers are the fruit of their push to educate women across the UAE,” Al Nizari said.
Al Beloushi added: “When I have to go on long-haul flights, my husband takes care of the children. He can cook, he changes diapers and he even does the laundry, and this is the kind of support that Emirati women need to excel in their chosen fields,” she said.
Mariam Al Obaidli, 21, a trainee aircraft maintenance engineer at Etihad, said she could not be where she was without her parents’ support.
“I start work at 5.30 am and often work for 12 hours, and my parents have only ever wished me more and more success,” she said.