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MENAFN- Khaleej Times) Growing up, Shama Abdullah Rashid Al Ali, always dreamed of working with Dubai Police.
"As a child, I used to watch movies where policemen and women would protect people from villains and they were hailed as heroes. I always wanted to be one of them," she said.
In 2013, she quit her job with Emirates Airline and joined the All-Female VIP Protection Squad to make her dream come true.
"I feel proud that I work here and I don't feel that I am any less than a man. We start training at 6 am, we run, do exercises and then we train on motorbikes."
Formed in 1994, the All-Female VIP Protection Squad currently comprises 45 Emirati women who are well-trained in shooting, martial arts and combat techniques. The squad has protected a large number of VIPs, includingHis HighnessSheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Vice President and Prime Minister of UAE and Ruler of Dubai andHis HighnessSheikh Hamdanbin Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Crown Prince of Dubai.
Major Saif Ahmad Saif Al Zeaabi, Assistant Manager, All-Women VIP Protection Unit, said: "I don't see any difference between the male and female protection teams. I have just one target which is to protect the VIP."
"The Dubai government is doing everything for them. They send new motorbikes for my staff. They send them abroad for training. They also get trainers from abroad to help my staff," he added.
First Warrant Officer Fatma Saeed Al Mamari, who joined the squad 11 years ago, is an expert motorcyclist. She said, "When we are outdoors on duty, many people are surprised to see us and want to take pictures with us. They are surprised to see women ride sports bikes. When other women see us protecting a VIP, they get amazed and inspired to do the same. They tell me that they also want to join Dubai Police and our department."
The ladies are selected based on their sharpness, strength and fitness. First Corporal Sara Jamal Eldin Abdelsatar Gewily joined the team in September 2017. She said she was selected for her shooting prowess. "I went through a shooting test. Thank God, all my attempts were successful. Every time I was able to hit the same target."
The women in black thank Dubai government for making them global role models.
"People thought many years ago that Arab women aren't allowed to work alongside men in police but now you can see everything has changed. Now women ride bikes, fly planes. Sheikh Mohammed wants women to take top positions in Dubai alongside men," Fatma Saeed Al Mamari said.
Watch:
Nilanjana Gupta As a multimedia journalist, I consider it a privilege to tell the stories of people in the UAE and allow the world to meet the people with whom their paths may never cross. I am a graduate of the Broadcast and Digital Journalism master's programme at Syracuse University in New York. Prior to joining Khaleej Times, I interned with Al Jazeera English in Washington DC and worked as a senior news desk editor with CNN-IBN in Delhi.
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