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All-women Indian pilot
crew make history by completing country's longest commercial flight
(CNN) — An all-female Indian pilot team
made history this week, after they completed the longest non-stop commercial
flight ever operated by an Indian national airline.
The team of four cockpit crew members from
Air India completed the 17-hour-long flight on Monday according a statement
released by the airline.
"We are India's daughters who were given
the opportunity to make this historic flight," the commander of the flight,
Captain Zoya Aggarwal, who flew the first leg of the flight, told CNN Travel.
"We were able to create a new chapter in the Indian aviation
history."
"I'm extremely proud to be a part of this
and I have been personally preparing for more than a year for this flight," she
said.
"The view from the North Pole is superb,"
said her co-pilot, Captain Thanmei Papagari, who flew the second half, adding
that as women, they "had a point to prove that we can do the job."
They were joined by two first officers:
Captain Akansha Sonaware and Captain Shivani Manhas.
Air India flight 176 -- a Boeing 777 --
departed from San Francisco on January 11, and arrived in Bengaluru, in southern
India, on Monday at 3.07am India Standard Time (4.37pm ET), covering a distance
of more than 8,600 miles, according to the statement.
It is also the first flight from South
India to be connected directly with the United States, according to a statement
from Kempegowda International Airport, Bengaluru (KIAB), where the flight
landed.
"This is the first non-stop flight between
Bengaluru and the United States, connecting the world's two tech hubs and sister
cities -- the original Silicon Valley and the Silicon Valley of India," the KIAB
statement said.
"After graduating college, I was jobless
for a very long time, as there were no jobs for women pilots," said Aggarwal. "I
used to teach young students who were aspiring pilots."
Aggarwal, who has more than 10 years of
experience, said that her parents initially opposed her becoming a
pilot.
"When I initially told my parents I
remember the tears in my mom's eyes because I was expected to 'walk in the
shadow of men' according to society," said Aggarwal. "But I told my parents that
this is what I want to do, and I broke away from the norms."
Papagari said that "a lot of planning" went
into the flight.
"Because we flew over the North Pole, there
were varying factors involved," she said. "This includes the weather, the solar
radiation levels, and the availability of airports in case of a
diversion."
India's Minister of Civil Aviation, Hardeep
Puri, congratulated the team on their journey.
"In a moment to cherish & celebrate,
women professionals of Indian civil aviation create history," Puri tweeted on
Monday. Heartiest Congratulations to Capt Zoya Aggarwal, Capt Papagari Thanmai,
Capt Akansha Sonaware & Capt Shivani for flying over North Pole to land in
Bengaluru from San Francisco."
"[This flight] will create more
opportunities for women," said Papagari. "The idea of seeing aviation as a
male-dominated field is reducing. We are being seen as pilots, there is no
differentiation."
India's aviation sector heavily invests in
training women to become pilots. About 12% of the country's pilots are women --
the highest percentage in the world, according to the Centre for
Aviation.
That's roughly three times the proportion
in the US, where just 4% are women.
In 2017, Air India said it became the first
airline to fly around the world with an all-female crew.
The Boeing 777 flew from New Delhi to San
Francisco over the Pacific Ocean. The crew completed a mandatory rest period
before flying over the Atlantic back to New Delhi, completing the
round-the-world trip.
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