In the Indian Armed Forces women are allowed to join mainly in combat service support branches and in non combatant roles. The Indian Air Force had 13.09% female officers in 2018 and 8.50% female officers in 2014; the Indian Navy had 6% female officers in 2018 and 3% female officers in 2014 and the Indian Army had 3.80% female officers in 2018 and 3% female officers in 2014. [1] [2] In 2020, three officers had the rank of lieutenant-general or equivalent, all in the Medical Services. In May 2021, 83 women were inducted as sepoys for the first time in the Indian Army's Corps of Military Police. [3] On 30 March 2023, 273 women were inducted in the Indian Navy as sailos for the first time in the history of the Indian Navy, total 2,585 agniveers passed out after successful completion of training from INS Chilka. [4] The Indian Air Force got airwomen for the first time in its history on 7 March 2024 as 153 female agniveers passed out from the Airmen Training School, Belagavi with 2,127 male agniveers. [5]
In 1888, the British Indian Army (BIA) established a military branch known as the Indian Military Nursing Service (IMNS), which recruited female nurses. This was the first time that the BIA recruited female service members into its ranks. [6] Female IMNS nurses served during World War I and World War II, 350 of whom either died, were taken as prisoners of war or were declared missing in action; one of the largest casualties suffered by the IMNS occurred in February 1942, when the SS Kuala, which was transporting several nurses, was sunk by Imperial Japanese Armed Forces bombers. [6] In May 1942, the Women's Auxiliary Corps was established to assist BIA operations; by the end of World War II, it had recruited 11,500 women. [7]
Noor Inayat Khan, who was of Indian descent, served in the Special Operations Executive (SOE) during World War II. She was secretly sent to German-occupied France to assist in SOE operations there. Khan was betrayed and captured before being subsequently executed at the Dachau concentration camp, and was posthumously awarded the George Cross for her service. [8] Kalyani Sen, the first Indian servicewoman who visited the United Kingdom, served in the Royal Indian Navy's Women's Royal Indian Naval Service during World War II. [9] In 2021, the Indian Armed Forces' National Defence Academy entrance exam was opened up to female cadets. [10]
Under the Army Act of 1950, women were ineligible for regular commissions except in "such corps, departments or branches which the central government may specify by way of notifications." [11] On 1 November 1958, the Army Medical Corps became the first unit of the Indian Army to grant regular commissions to women. [12] Since 1992, women were first inducted in to various branches of Indian Army only in short service commission. [11] In 2008, women were first inducted as permanent commissioned officers in Legal and Education corps, in 2020 they were first inducted in 8 more corps as permanent commissioned officers. [13] As of 2020, women are not yet allowed as combatants in the Parachute Regiment of the Indian Army or other special forces, but they can join paratroopers wings of their respective arms like para EME, para signals, para ASC, etc.
Here is the status of women's induction in various branches of army in any role as well as in coveted permanent commissioned officers role. [14] [11]
Serial Number | Name of corps/regiment | Women commissioned | Since | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Army Aviation Corps | 2020 [14] | Women cannot get permanent commission. | |
2 | Army Corps of Signals | 1992 [11] | Since 2020 in permanent commission (short service commission). [14] | |
3 | Army Dental Corps | 1888 or earlier [6] | Since 1958 in permanent commission (long service commission). [12] | |
4 | Army Education Corps | 1992 [11] | Since 2008 in permanent commission (short service commission). [14] | |
5 | Army Medical Corps | 1888 or earlier [6] | Since 1958 in permanent commission (long service commission). [12] | |
6 | Army Ordnance Corps | 1992 [11] | Since 2020 in permanent commission (short service commission). [14] | |
7 | Army Postal Service Corps | 1992 [11] | Women cannot get a permanent commission. | |
8 | Army Service Corps | 2020 [14] | Since 2020 in permanent commission (short service commission). | |
9 | Corps of Army Air Defence | 2020 [14] | Since 2020 in permanent commission (short service commission). | |
10 | Corps of Electronics and Mechanical Engineers | 1992 [11] | Since 2020 in permanent commission (short service commission). [14] | |
11 | Corps of Engineers | 2020 [14] | Since 2020 in permanent commission (short service commission). | |
12 | Corps of Military Police | N.A. | Women cannot get commission. | |
13 | Defence Security Corps | N.A. | Women cannot get commission. | |
14 | Intelligence Corps | 2020 (short service commission) [14] | Capt. Ganeve Lalji was the first Aide de camp to an army commander (Lieutenant General). [15] | |
15 | Judge Advocate General's Department | 1992 [11] | Since 2008 in permanent commission (short service commission). [13] | |
16 | Military Nursing Service | 1888 [6] | Major General Joyce Gladys Roach is the present commander. [16] | |
17 | Pioneer Corps | N.A. | Women cannot get commission. | |
18 | Regiments (Armoured) | N.A. | Women cannot get commission. [17] | |
19 | Regiments (Artillery) | 2023 | Since 2023 in permanent commission (short service commission). [17] | |
20 | Regiments (Infantry) | N.A. | Women cannot get commission. [17] | |
21 | Regiments (Mechanised) | N.A. | Women cannot get commission. | |
22 | Remount and Veterinary Corps | N.A. | Women cannot get commission. | |
23 | Territorial Army | 2018 [18] | Women cannot get permanent commission. |
As of 2020, women are not allowed to serve in combat units such as Infantry, Mechanised infantry and Armoured corps List of regiments of the Indian Army. [14]
On 27 August 1976, Gertrude Alice Ram, the military nursing service Matron-in-Chief, became the first woman officer in the Indian Army to attain the rank of Major General, and the first female officer in the Indian Armed Forces to attain two-star rank. With Ram's promotion, India became only the third nation in the world to promote a woman to flag rank, behind the United States and France. [19]
In 1992, the Indian Army began inducting women officers in non-medical roles. [20] On 19 January 2007, the United Nations first all female peacekeeping force made up of 105 Indian policewomen was deployed to Liberia. [21] Ruchi Sharma became the first operational paratrooper in the Indian Army, joining in 1996. [22]
Priya Jhingan, commissioned in 1993, is one of the first 25 women to join the Indian Army as an officer. [23] [24] [25] Alka Khurana Sharma also one of the first women to join the Indian Army and served ten years in the Army Ordnance Corps. In 1992, she was the first woman officer to participate in the Army Day and the Republic Day parades. [26] Sapper Shanti Tigga was the first female jawan (private rank) in the Indian Army who joined in 2011. [15] Priya Semwal's husband had fallen in a counter-insurgency operation in Arunachal Pradesh in 2012; she went onto join as an officer in the Indian Army Corps of EME, the first wife of a jawan whose husband had fallen in a counter-insurgency operation to do so. [15]
Lieutenant Colonel Mitali Madhumita, commissioned in 2000, is the first woman officer in India to receive a gallantry award, who received the Sena Medal in 2011 for exemplary courage shown during the attack on the Indian embassy in Kabul by terrorists in Kabul, Afghanistan on 26 February 2010, [27] and operations in Jammu-Kashmir [28] and the northeast states. [27] [29] [30]
Anjana Bhaduria, who joined the first-ever batch of female cadets in 1992 at the Officers Training Academy, Chennai, is the first female officer in the Indian Army to win the gold medal. Including Priya Jhingan and her, the first batch of women officers of the Indian Army was commissioned in March 1993. [31] [15] Divya Ajith Kumar, commissioned in 2010, is the first female officer to receive the Sword of Honor. [32] [33] She led all women contingent of 154 women officers and cadets during the Republic Day parade of 2015. [33]
Captain Swati Singh, an engineer and then only female officer in her 63 Brigade of the Indian Army, is the first female officer to be deployed at Nathu La pass as Signals in-charge. [15] In February 2020 Madhuri Kanitkar became the third woman to become a Lieutenant General in the Indian Army. Along with her husband who is also a Lieutenant General they will be the first couple to both reach the rank. [34]
On 17 February 2020, the Supreme Court of India said that women officers in Indian Army can get command positions at par with male officers. The court said that the government's arguments against it were discriminatory, disturbing and based on stereotype. The court also said that permanent commission should be available to all women, regardless of years of service, and that this order must be implemented in 3 months. [35] The government had earlier said troops would not accept women as commanding officers. [36] Consequently, 8 more corps or branches started to induct women as commissioned officers. [14]
Ganeve Lalji, Corps of Military intelligence, was the first woman to be an Aide de camp to an Army Commander (Lieutenant General). [15]
In October 1976, Dr. Barbara Ghosh became the first woman officer in the Indian Navy to attain the rank of commander. Having joined the navy in 1961, she was also the first woman medical officer to receive a permanent naval commission. [37]
Dr. Punita Arora, commissioned in 1968, is the first woman in the Indian Army to reach the second highest rank, Lieutenant General, [38] and the first female Vice Admiral. [39]
On 8 March 2018, International Women's Day the six-member crew of INSV Tarini that participated in Navika Sagar Parikrama namely Lt Cdr Vartika Joshi, Lt Cdr P. Swathi, Lt Cdr Pratibha Jammwal, Lt Payal Gupta, Lt Aishwarya Boddapati, and Lt Shourgrakpam Vijaya Devi were conferred Nari Shakti Puraskar for outstanding contribution towards women empowerment. The award was received by Lieutenant Shourgrakpam Vijaya Devi, who is Northeast India's first female officer on behalf of team. [40] All six women officers were also awarded the Nao Sena Medal (Gallantry) and the Tenzing Norgay Adventure Award. [41]
On 2 December 2019, Sub-lieutenant Shubhangi Swaroop became the first woman pilot for the Indian Navy. She will be flying the Dornier 228 surveillance aircraft. [42] In September 2020, two women officers - Sub Lieutenants Kumudini Tyagi and Riti Singh - were deployed onboard warships for the first time. They were selected to serve as airborne tacticians to operate from the deck of warships. [43] [44]
On 26 August 2021, Surgeon Vice Admiral Sheila S. Mathai became the fourth woman to be promoted to three-star rank and the first direct navy woman vice-admiral. Surgeon Vice Admiral Arti Sarin is the third woman to hold three-star rank in the Indian Navy. [45]
In December 2023, Lieutenant Commander Prerna Deosthalee became the first woman officer of the Indian Navy to command an Indian Naval Warship. [46]
Indian Air Force inducts women in all roles, including combat and support roles. As of September 2020, there were 1,875 female officers serving in the IAF, including 10 pilots and 18 navigators. [47]
The first woman officer in the Indian Air Force, Vijayalakshmi Ramanan, was commissioned into the Army Medical Corps and was seconded to the Air Force. She retired as a Wing Commander in the Air Force in 1979. [48]
In August 1966, Flight Lieutenant Kanta Handa, an IAF medical officer, became the first female IAF officer to receive a commendation for her service during the 1965 Indo-Pakistan war. [49] In 1994, women joined the air force as pilots in support role; Gunjan Saxena and Sreevidya Rajan [50] were among the first women to fly in a combat zone during Kargil War (May–July 1999). [15]
In 2006, Deepika Misra became the first IAF woman pilot to train for the Sarang display team. [15] In 2012, Nivedita Singh (Flight Lieutenant) from Rajasthan, became the first woman from the Indian Air Force to summit the Mount Everest. [15]
In 2015, Indian Air Force opened new combat air force roles for women as fighter pilots, adding to their role as helicopter pilots in the Indian Air Force. [51]
On 22 May 2019, Bhawana Kanth became the first woman fighter pilot to qualify to undertake combat missions. [52] Women are now taking up combat roles in Indian Air Force with Avani Chaturvedi, Mohana Singh Jitarwal, and Bhawana Kanth being the first 3 women fighter pilots [53] Marking International Women's Day on 8 March 8, 2020 all 3 fighter pilots were awarded Nari Shakti Puraskar. [54]
Wing Commander Shaliza Dhami became the first woman officer to be given permanent commission with the Indian Air Force. [55] Squadron Leader Minty Agarwal became the first woman to receive a Yudh Seva Medal. [56]
As of 2020, Women are not yet allowed as combatant in the combat specialist forces, such as Ghatak Force, para commandos, etc.
The para commandos is a voluntary service and the recruitment procedure of Para and Para SF does not strictly mention any gender for the soldiers that can participate. It is not clear if any women have been able to participate or qualify for this ELITE force.
The Indian Airforce and the Indian Navy have allowed women to join the Garud Commando Force and the MARCOS respectively. It is not clear as of 2023, if any women have been able to qualify.
Dr. Seema Rao, also known as "India's Wonder Woman", [57] [58] [59] is India's first woman commando trainer, [60] having trained over 15,000 Special Forces of India [61] [62] (including the NSG, MARCOS, GARUD) [63] as full-time guest trainer for 20 years without compensation [63] [64] as a pioneer in close quarter battle (CQB). [65] [66]
Women in Indian Coast Guard, Assam Rifles and Special Frontier Force.
Women can join the Indian Coast Guard in officer ranks as general duty, pilot or law officers. [67] In January 2017, Indian Coast Guard became the first force to deploy four female officers, assistant commandants Anuradha Shukla, Sneha Kathayat, Shirin Chandran and Vasundhara Chouksey, in combat roles on board KV Kuber hovercraft ship patrolling the Indian maritime zone bordering Pakistan and Bangladesh. [68]
In April 2016, Assam Rifles inducted a first batch of 100 female soldiers who had undergone year-long training programme and graduated in the passing-out parade at the Assam Rifles Training Centre and School in Shokhüvi in Chümoukedima District of Nagaland. They will be deployed at Cordon And Search Operation (CASO), Mobile Check Posts (MCP) and road opening operations in various battalions for search, frisking and interrogation of women, crowd control and dispersal of female agitators. [69] [70]
In August 2020, around 30 rifle-women from Assam Rifles were deployed along the LoC for the first time. They are led by Captain Gursimran Kaur of the Army Service Corps. [71] [72]
Special Frontier Force, created in 1962 as a most covert and elite Special Force unit as the armed wing of RAW to conduct covert operations behind the Chinese Lines in the event of another Sino-Indian War, [73] inducted 500 female in 1972 for the first time in medical, signals and clerical roles. [74]
In 1992, Asha Sinha, a 1982 Batch IPS Officer, became the First Woman Commandant in the Paramilitary forces of India when she was posted as Commandant, Central Industrial Security Force in Mazagon Dock Shipbuilders Limited and after 34 years of service she retired as Director General of Police (DGP). In 2018 an IPS Officer Archana Ramasundram of 1980 Batch became the First Woman to become the Director General of Police of a Paramilitary Force as DG, Sashastra Seema Bal, she retired after serving for 37 years.
In March 2016, govt allowed direct-entry women officers in all five Central Armed Police Forces, namely Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF), Border Security Force (BSF), Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP), Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) and Central Industrial Security Force (CISF), allow direct entry to women in junior rank via direct recruitment and also to women officer via Union Public Service Commission in supervisory combat roles. [75] In March 2016, Home Minister Rajnath Singh announced that women will be inducted in 33% constable-rank personnel in CRPF and CISF and 15% in the border guarding forces BSF, SSB and ITBP. [75]
Central Reserve Police Force (CRPF) allows women officers in supervisory combat roles since a long time via UPSC route. [75]
Central Industrial Security Force (CISF) allows women officers in supervisory combat roles since a long time via UPSC route. [75]
Border Security Force (BSF) allowed women officers in supervisory combat roles in 2013. [75]
Sashastra Seema Bal (SSB) allowed women officers in supervisory combat roles in 2014. [75]
Indo-Tibetan Border Police (ITBP) allowed women officers in supervisory combat roles in 2016. [75] About 1.75% (1,500) of 80,000 ITBP personnel are women, mostly in the rank of constables (c. March 2016). [75]
Women also serve in the National Security Guard (NSG), Special Protection Group (SPG), Railway Protection Force (RPF), National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) and Border Roads Organisation (BRO).
National Security Guard (NSG) (Black Cat Commandos) inducted female commandos for the first in 2011–12, however the first discrimination they faced was from the then female Chief Minister, Mayawati who refused to be guarded by the female commandos. [76] In 2015, govt announced that the female NSG Black Cat Commandos, who undergo the same training as their male counterpart, will be deployed in counter-terrorism operations as they also perform VIP protection duties. [77]
Special Protection Group (SPG) inducted female commandos in 2013, and then Prime Minister Manmohan Singh's wife Gursharan Kaur became the first SPG protectee to have women commandos. [78] [79]
Railway Protection Force (RPF) has female unit, Shakti Squad. In 2015, 25-year-old Debashmita Chattopadhyay became first female Assistant Security Commissioner (ASC) in RPF who took charge of the Shakti squad of RPF women constables. [80]
National Disaster Response Force (NDRF) got its first woman commander in 2015 when 40-years old senior Commandant Rekha Nambiar joined the 4th Battalion based in Arakkonam in Tamil Nadu to lead 1,000 personnel-strong all-men battalion. [81]
In June 2021, Vaishali Hiwase became the first women commanding officer to command a BRO Road Construction Company part of the India-China Border Roads. [82]
Six women have been promoted to three-star rank in the Indian Armed Forces. All of them are from the Medical Corps and graduate medical doctors of the Armed Forces Medical College (AFMC).
S.No | Photo | Name | Branch | Date of promotion | Notes |
---|---|---|---|---|---|
1 | Lieutenant General Punita Arora PVSM , SM , VSM | Indian Army | 1 September 2004 [83] | First woman to be elevated to three-star rank. Later moved to the Indian Navy and held the rank of Vice Admiral. [84] | |
2 | Air Marshal Padma Bandopadhyay PVSM , AVSM , VSM | Indian Air Force | 1 October 2004 [85] | First woman to be promoted to three-star rank in the Indian Air Force. [86] | |
3 | Lieutenant General Madhuri Kanitkar PVSM , AVSM , VSM | Indian Army | 29 February 2020 | Last served as Deputy Chief of the Integrated Defence Staff (Medical) (DCIDS (Med)) at HQ IDS. [87] | |
4 | Surgeon Vice Admiral Sheila S. Mathai NM , VSM | Indian Navy | 26 August 2021 | Last served as Director General (Organization and Personnel) of Armed Forces Medical Services (AFMS). [88] | |
5 | Lieutenant General Rajshree Ramasethu | Indian Army | 16 September 2021 | Former Commandant of Armed Forces Medical College (AFMC). [89] | |
6 | Surgeon Vice Admiral Arti Sarin AVSM , VSM | Indian Navy | 5 October 2022 | Current Director General Medical Services (Navy). Earlier held the rank of Air Marshal in the Indian Air Force. [90] | |
7 | Lieutenant General Sadhna S Nair VSM | Indian Army | 23 October 2023 | Current Director General Medical Services (Army). Earlier Director General Hospital Services (Armed Forces) in the rank of Air Marshal. [91] | |
8 | Lieutenant General Kavita Sahai SM , VSM | Indian Army | 1 February 2024 | Current Commandant AMC Centre & College and OIC Records. [92] |
The United States Armed Forces are the military forces of the United States. The armed forces consist of six service branches: the Army, Marine Corps, Navy, Air Force, Space Force, and Coast Guard. All six armed services are among the eight uniformed services of the United States, along with the U.S. Public Health Service Commissioned Corps and the NOAA Commissioned Officer Corps.
India has several Special Forces (SF) units, with the various branches of the Indian Armed Forces having their own separate special forces units. The Para SF of the Indian Army, MARCOS of the Indian Navy and the Garud Commando Force of the Indian Air Force. There are other special forces which are not controlled by the military, but operate under civilian organisations, such as the National Security Guard under the Home Ministry and the Special Group under the Research and Analysis Wing, the external intelligence agency of India. Small groups from the military SF units are deputed in the Armed Forces Special Operations Division, a unified command and control structure.
The Indian Air Force (IAF) is the air arm of the Indian Armed Forces. Its primary mission is to secure Indian airspace and to conduct aerial warfare during armed conflicts. It was officially established on 8 October 1932 as an auxiliary air force of the British Empire which honoured India's aviation service during World War II with the prefix Royal. After India gained independence from United Kingdom in 1947, the name Royal Indian Air Force was kept and served in the name of the Dominion of India. With the transition to a republic in 1950, the prefix Royal was removed.
The Indian Air Force (IAF), the aerial component of the Indian Armed Forces follows a certain hierarchy of rank designations and insignia derived from the erstwhile Royal Indian Air Force (RIAF).
The Garud Commando Force is the special forces unit of the Indian Air Force. It was formed in February 2004 and has a current strength of over 1500 personnel. The unit derives its name from Garuda, a Hindu deity.
The Royal Indian Air Force (RIAF) was the aerial force of British India and later the Dominion of India. Along with the Indian Army, and Royal Indian Navy, it was one of the Armed Forces of British Indian Empire.
The Chief of the Air Staff (CAS) is a statutory office held by the professional head of the Indian Air Force (IAF), the aerial branch of the Indian Armed Forces. Customarily held by a four-star air chief marshal, the CAS is the senior-most operational officer of the IAF, mandated with the responsibilities of supervising the force's overall functioning during states of peace and wartime, committing to the establishment-cum-continuity of air deterrence and executing India's security objectives vis-à-vis the preservation of the country's air sovereignty.
The Indian Armed Forces are the military forces of the Republic of India. It consists of three professional uniformed services: the Indian Army, Indian Navy, and Indian Air Force. Additionally, the Indian Armed Forces are supported by the Central Armed Police Forces, Indian Coast Guard and Special Frontier Force and various inter-service commands and institutions such as the Strategic Forces Command, the Andaman and Nicobar Command and the Integrated Defence Staff. The President of India is the Supreme Commander of the Indian Armed Forces but the executive authority and responsibility for national security is vested in the Prime Minister of India and their chosen Cabinet Ministers. The Indian Armed Forces are under the management of the Ministry of Defence of the Government of India. With strength of over 1.4 million active personnel, it is the world's second-largest military force and has the world's largest volunteer army. It also has the third-largest defence budget in the world. The Global Firepower Index report lists it as the fourth most-powerful military.
This list is about women in warfare and the military from 1945 to 1999, worldwide.
This article is about women in warfare and the military (2000–present) throughout the world outside the United States. For women in warfare and the military in the United States since 2000, please see: Timeline of women in warfare and the military in the United States, 2000–2010 and Timeline of women in warfare and the military in the United States, 2011–present.
The Army Aviation Corps (AAC) is the youngest arm of the Indian Army, being formally designated on 1 November 1986. The Army Aviation Corps units are designated as Squadrons. Each squadron generally consists of two Flights. Reconnaissance (Recce) and Observation flights might be part of squadrons or operate independently. The latter do not have a parent squadron and are designated by an (I) in their name.
The recent history of changes in women's roles includes having women in the military. Every country in the world permits the participation of women in the military, in one form or another. In 2018, only two countries conscripted women and men on the same formal conditions: Norway and Sweden. A few other countries have laws conscripting women into their armed forces, however with some difference such as service exemptions, length of service, and more. Some countries do not have conscription, but men and women may serve on a voluntary basis under equal conditions. Alenka Ermenc was the first female head of armed forces in any of the NATO member states, having served as the Chief of the General Staff of the Slovenian Armed Forces between 2018 and 2020.
Women in the Pakistan Armed Forces are the female officers who serve in the Pakistan Armed Forces. In 2006, the first women fighter pilot batch joined the combat aerial mission command of PAF. The Pakistan Navy prohibits women from serving in the combat branch. Rather, they are appointed and serve in operations involving military logistics, staff and senior administrative offices, particularly in the regional and central headquarters. There was a rise in the number of women applying for the combat branch of PAF in 2013.
Seema Rao is popularly known as “Wonder Woman of India” amongst the Indian media. She is India's first female special forces trainer, having trained Special Forces of India for over two decades without compensation. She is an expert in close quarter battle (CQB) — the art of fighting in tight proximity — and is involved in training various Indian forces. She works in partnership with Major Deepak Rao, her husband.
This article lists events involving Women in warfare and the military in the United States since 2011. For the previous decade, see Timeline of women in warfare and the military in the United States, 2000–2010.
Squadron Leader Avani Chaturvedi is an Indian pilot from Rewa district, Madhya Pradesh. She was declared as the first female combat pilot in India along with two of her cohorts, Mohana Singh Jitarwal, and Bhawana Kanth. The trio was inducted into the Indian Air Force fighter squadron in June 2016. They were formally commissioned by then Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar on 18 June 2016, to serve the nation.
Bhawana Kanth is one of the first female fighter pilots of India. She was declared as the first combat pilot along with two of her cohort, Mohana Singh, and Avani Chaturvedi. The trio was inducted into the Indian Air Force fighter squadron in June 2016. They were formally commissioned by Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar. After the government of India decided to open the fighter stream in India Air Force for women on an experimental basis, these three women were the first to be selected for the program.
Squadron Leader Mohana Singh Jitarwal is one of the first female fighter pilots of India. She was declared as the first female combat pilot along with two of her cohort, Bhawana Kanth, and Avani Chaturvedi. All three women pilots were inducted into the Indian Air Force fighter squadron in June 2016. They were formally commissioned by Defence Minister Manohar Parrikar. After the government of India decided to open the fighter stream in India Air Force for women on an experimental basis, these three women were the first to be selected for the program.
This is a timeline of women in the Indian military and Coast Guard.