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Pakistan army to turns to women for combat

2006-04-22 Islamabad: Pakistan's army will soon start recruiting women officers for active combat duty, a senior military official said.

'In the beginning, we will induct some 30 women cadets (for regular commission as officers) in the army's corps of signals, electrical and mechanical engineering (EME) and the legal branch,' the Associated Press of Pakistan (APP) Saturday quoted chief military spokesman Major General Shaukat Sultan as saying.

This will be the first exposure of women to these 'highly technical' branches of the army, he told the agency.

Sultan said induction of women officers in combat corps would be considered after evaluating performance of these 30 cadets, who would get commission in the army on completion of their studies and military training.

While women doctors and nurses are already serving the army's medical corps, they have never been part of any combat force in the over 500,000-strong army, comprising mainly infantry, armoured corps and artillery.

For the first time in its history, the army also inducted a Pakistani Sikh, as a cadet in the Pakistan military academy (PMA), some 125 km north of Islamabad.

The cadet, identified as Harcharan Singh, is set to graduate as Second Lieutenant in October 2007.

Non-Muslim minorities make some three percent of Pakistan's roughly 155 million population. Minorities' representation in the armed forces is equally low, and only a few Christian officers and soldiers are serving the forces.

Meanwhile, Pakistan Air Force (PAF) for the first time commissioned four women combat fliers in its general duty pilots (GDP) branch last month.

On April 13, two under-training female cadets of the PAF academy became the first Pakistani women to complete a Para-jumping course.

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