Exclusive: Lahore woman sets new precedent as female bike captain

I have been driving the bike since I was 12 years old and I was passionate about riding the bike, says Riffat


Azifa Ayaz January 19, 2018
Riffat Shehraz, the first female bike captain. PHOTO: CAREEM

Pakistan now has female bike captains as a part of Careem's women empowerment scheme. These women are Pakistan's first female bike captains. Riffat Shehraz shines as one of the first few who have taken on this task in Lahore.

These women stand as symbols to the world that women are capable of doing anything they put their mind to.

In an exclusive interview with The Express Tribune, Riffat said that she is glad to have gotten a platform to bring out the best of her passion.

"I have been driving the bike since I was 12 years old and I was passionate about riding the bike," she said.

Careem Pakistan and its mission to empower women

PHOTO: CAREEM

Riffat believes that bike riding services aren't restricted to gender or by gender. "If you are scared, the fear will lead you nowhere. Today, if you are going to be scared, then tomorrow you will not be able to do anything.” She believes that women are capable of achieving a lot more than they are given the opportunity to.

Amid rising tensions on security issues for women and children, Riffat says that she would have never made the effort of visiting places that she does now because of her passengers. She says that this experience also shaped her confidence greatly.

“I am also a female and I also want to take rides at the 11th hour but I know that I have to wake up early and start my day therefore at 10 pm, I take my last ride,” she said of her daily routine. She wakes up at 9 am to initiate her day.

However, Riffat doesn't have to comply with a set number of rides, "I can take as many as I want to, sometimes I take them till 9 pm and sometimes it’s 10 pm but I don’t want to say no to anyone ever. I try my best to make my passengers happy."

Riffat believes she is lucky as she didn't have to face any major issue regarding her passengers. "Everyone respects me," she said, adding that neither male nor female passengers caused her any hassle.

PHOTO: CAREEM

"I feel, if you respect men, then they respect you in return too, all my rides so far with the males have been very nice and ended on cordial terms," she narrated.

Uber and Careem hiring female drivers in Saudi Arabia

"I have gone as far as Thokar Niaz Baig, a place I have never visited, so the commuting and distance is not an issue for me at all. It is sometimes from Wapda Town or Model Town that I go to faraway places," she said.

Riffat is a source of pride with all that she has achieved. She also is a proud part of Careem as that is the platform that encouraged her to pursue this.

In November 2015, the company had announced that they will start hiring female captain drivers.

COMMENTS (4)

karachiite | 6 years ago | Reply @greatguy - BrainBro is right. I'm from Karachi and over here most middle class men and women have Saudi type mindset. When I visited Lahore I was shocked to see the high participation of women in public life. In Karachi you'll rarely see women out on the road unless it's a shopping mall, restaurant or parks in clifton/defence.
Atsul | 6 years ago | Reply @BrainBro: I agree with you 100% Punjab women are taking the lead and I think they are getting motivated by behavior of men in Punjab who have put on makeup and wear bangles accepting and supporting Sharif's dictatorship.
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