First woman pilot in Libya combat mission

25 March,2011 07:00 AM IST |   |  Agencies

A female pilot in Britain's Royal Air Force (RAF) has become the first woman to fly a Typhoon fighter aircraft on a combat mission during the current enforcement of a no-fly zone over Libya, British media reports said yesterday.


A female pilot in Britain's Royal Air Force (RAF) has become the first woman to fly a Typhoon fighter aircraft on a combat mission during the current enforcement of a no-fly zone over Libya, British media reports said yesterday.

Flight-Lieutenant Helen Seymour (31), took to the skies from Gioia del Colle airbase in southern Italy, where the RAF fighters are stationed.


People gather around coffins of people who were killed by attacks during a mass funeral in Tripoli yesterday

She was all smiles after her return from the seven-hour mission, flown with two other Typhoons and two Tornado aircraft.

The Typhoon, also known as the Eurofighter, is a sophisticated supersonic jet built jointly by a number of European countries.

It is designed specifically for use in mid-air dogfights and carries missiles for use in air-to-air combat.

British female pilots have flown in combat before, including in Harrier and Tornado GR4 aircraft, over Afghanistan. The RAF first started using female pilots in the mid 1980s.

Air Commodore Andrew Lambert, who commanded a female pilot over Iraq in 1999, was full of praise for women pilots who he said were usually "extremely professional".

"You are judged as a pilot by what you can do in the air, not the tone of your voice," he said.

10
Number of women pilots flying the Tornado or Typhoon at present

1,550 mph
Speed of the Typhoon that Flight-Lieutenant Helen Seymour pilots

ufffd150 Million
Cost incurred by England in the war against Gaddafi

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female pilot Britain Royal Air Force Libya mission