[Published: Tuesday February 06 2018]
Chile's first female pilot dies aged 97
Santiago 6 Feb (ANA) - Margot Duhalde, started flying when she was 16 years old, gaining her pilot's licence two years later, just before the outbreak of World War Two. She travelled to Europe to volunteer for the Free French Forces but ended up enlisting with the British. Mrs Duhalde spent the war transporting planes into combat zones in continental Europe.
Later she became Chile's first female air traffic controller. A government statement said: "We are grateful for the huge contribution she made to Chilean aviation and recognise the courage she had to fulfil her life's dream, breaking stereotypes and showing the way to other women."
Last year Mrs Duhalde told a Chilean TV station "the men were convinced they were the only ones who could do things". "They always looked down on us women, it is only recently that they are beginning to realise we are equal and actually better than them."
Margot Duhalde got her flying licence in 1938 but there were few opportunities for a woman pilot in Chile. When war broke out a year later, she went to the French consulate in Santiago to volunteer for the Free French Forces in London because she had family connections with France.
Not yet legally an adult, she lied to her parents and told them she was going to Canada as an instructor. She ended up in the UK with 13 other volunteers and presented herself at the headquarters of the Free French Forces.
"The truth is that the French.. didn't know what to do with me. They mixed up my name with that of a man, Marcel, in other words they thought I was a man." She left the French after they assigned her to look after wounded pilots.(ANA)
FA/ANA/6 February 2018-------
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