Indian Navy gets its first women combatants

November 17, 2009 07:54 pm | Updated November 17, 2021 10:47 am IST - Kochi

SMALL STEP FOR WOMANKIND: Sub Lieutenants Seema Rani Sarma and Ambica Hooda, who will be inducted on November 20 as the Navy's first airborne tacticians Photo: Vipin Chandran

SMALL STEP FOR WOMANKIND: Sub Lieutenants Seema Rani Sarma and Ambica Hooda, who will be inducted on November 20 as the Navy's first airborne tacticians Photo: Vipin Chandran

The Indian Navy on Friday will script history on November 20, when it enlists two women officers as observers on board its fleet of maritime patrol aircraft (MPA), putting an end to debates over the induction of women in combat roles in the Armed Forces.

With the coveted ‘wings’ conferred on them at a passing out ceremony here, Sub Lieutenants Ambica Hooda and Seema Rani Sharma, both 22 years, will become the first women airborne tacticians of the Navy, which has taken the lead in according equal opportunities to the fairer gender by starting entry for women in the observer cadre as Short Service Commissioned Officers.

“Having commendably completed their training, the [lady] officers will now be posted to the Dornier maritime reconnaissance squadrons as Electronic Warfare Sensor Officers. And, on a maritime patrol aircraft, observers carry out operation of radar, electronic sensor systems, electronic warfare systems, anti-submarine warfare systems, maritime air operations for independent search and tracking, coordination with the Air Force and the like,” said Commander PVGK Nambiar, Officer-in-Charge of the Observer School in INS Garuda who has overseen the 27-week flying training taken by the lady officers, who formed part of a mixed batch of four.

“Their training on the avionics fitted on the Dorniers will stand them in good stead when they get converted to the IL-38 and the TU-142 at a later stage where they will be required to carry out tactical operation of weapons,” said Commander Sridhar Warrier, Chief Instructor of the Observer School.

A training that lasted 16 months, starting with a six-month orientation course at the Naval Academy, has given them the grit, gumption and zeal to soar to greater heights. They also got attached to professional schools INS Shivaji in Lonavla; INS Hamla in Mumbai; and INS Satavahana in Visakhapatnam prior to their final training at the Observer School.

“During the course, we flew 17 sorties, each of three-hour duration,” Sub Lt Seema, hailing from Aligarh in Uttar Pradesh, told The Hindu. Her father served the Navy and her brothers, serving it. “I am feeling proud that I’ve set the course for young women to follow,” she said of her choice.

Sub Lieutenant Ambica, from Rohtak in Haryana, didn’t have any clue when she filled up the application form after graduation that she would go down in history as one of the first two women combatants in the Navy. Her father served the Army, but an uncle in the Navy encouraged her to strive for a different role. Still excited about their first Dornier sortie, she says a gender-sensitive infrastructure has already fallen in place when their training commenced. “I am ready to handle any role I am asked to perform,” she said.

On Monday, the duo flew their 18th sortie, under the watchful eyes of a Qualified Navigation Instructor (QNI) from the Aircats (Aircrew Categorisation and Standardisation Board), the nodal agency in naval aviation to test the degree of professionalism of the air crew. As Sub Lts Seema and Ambica emerged from the aircraft post their three-and-a-half hour standardisation procedure during which they flew over the southern peninsula, a delighted Commander Satish Kumar, their Aircats examiner, told The Hindu: “They were supposed to take the aircraft from point A to point B and were expected to fix its position at any point in time. They did way above average.”

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