Female UAE pilot joins fight against ISIS
A female
pilot has led United Arab Emirates air strikes that targeted Islamic
State jihadists in Syria as part of the US-led campaign against
extremists.
Major Mariam
al-Mansouri, 35, "led the squadron" of UAE fighter jets that
participated in raids Tuesday against the extremists, an Emirati source
familiar with the matter said.
The UAE did not confirm officially that a woman was among the pilots that conducted the raids.
Mansouri
is reportedly the first female UAE pilot of a fighter jet. She
graduated from Abu Dhabi's Khalifa bin Zayed Air College in 2007 and is
veteran pilot of F-16 warplanes.
Washington
has said the United Arab Emirates, Saudi Arabia, Bahrain and Jordan,
took part in the strikes on the Islamic State, which has seized swaths
of Iraq and northern Syria.
Saudi Arabia on Wednesday released photographs of eight airmen it said were involved in Tuesday's US-led operations.
Mansouri's
participation in the raid stirred a debate on social media networks,
with supporters posting her picture on Twitter and commending her
service.
"She is taking part in crushing the dens of Daesh," wrote one woman on Twitter, using an Arabic acronym for IS.
Angry Islamist sympathisers, however, slammed Mansouri's "criminal" act.
The
UAE is a largely conservative Gulf state, where women citizens wear the
traditional Islamic head cover and black Abaya loose cloak.
But
authorities in the oil-rich state have made efforts to put pioneering
women forward and many women have assumed top government positions.
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