PESHAWAR: Saima Sharif decided to join the police force in the northwestern Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province after her brother, a police constable, was killed in a militant attack in Peshawar city in 2012.
Since then, the 29-year-old, who is currently an elite commando and assistant sub-inspector, has held several positions in Peshawar, working as an investigator and a victim support officer.
But her most important role came in October this year when she was posted to Sudan as part of a UN peacekeeping mission — the first female police officer from the conservative Khyber Pakhtunkhwa province to be selected for the job.
“I’ll spend one year in Sudan to contribute to the UN-mandated peacebuilding mission,” Sharif told Arab News by phone. “The atmosphere here in Darfur [Sudan] is tough but I enjoy dealing with new challenges.”
In Sudan, Sharif is deployed in Khor Abeche in South Darfur as a patrolling officer where she works particularly with women in the area to solve their problems and ensure their rights are protected.
“I hold meetings with the local population, specifically women, to help minimize their problems,” she said. “Women here [in Sudan] face formidable problems such as underage marriages, a menace that is rampant. We help women overcome their issues.”
As a victim support officer in the Khyber Pakhtunkhwa police force, Sharif is used to tackling cases of abuse and violence against women and children, and said she hopes to now carry her “new learning experiences” back with her to Pakistan.
“I plan to bring back what I’m learning here and replicate it in my home station in Peshawar,” the police officer said. “I’ll teach female police officials in KP how to deal with a female victim and how to ensure her rights... how to investigate cases of violence against a woman.”
When the novel coronavirus broke out in Pakistan earlier this year, Sharif said she was sometimes on duty for almost 24 hours at a women’s quarantine center where she worked as a guard for patients attempting to escape.
“Sharif’s selection in the UN mission abroad is a proud moment for the entire KP police. She really deserves all appreciation as a woman police officer who never lost courage despite the fact that her brother was martyred,” Muhammad Alam, a spokesperson for the police in Peshawar city, told Arab News.
For Sharif, her deployment abroad is a continuation of her brother’s mission but also part of her own personal aim to fight to create more space for women in Pakistani police.
“I want an enhanced female quota in the police department,” Sharif said. “I encourage other females to join the police without any hesitation because in many cases, female police personnel can work better.”