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First Zim female helicopter pilot crashes to death

Tinashe Manyowa and Anita Mapiye who met their untimely death on Friday when a helicopter they were piloting crushed outside Harare

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Zimbabwe’s first female helicopter fighter pilot was killed in a fiery helicopter crash in Arcturus, 32km east of Harare, on Friday.

Thirty-year-old Flight Lieutenant Annita Mapiye, who has flown President Emmerson Mnangagwa, was killed with another pilot, a wing commander, and a technician when an Air Force of Zimbabwe Bell 412 crashed into a house in the Hukuru neighbourhood.

A child who was on the ground died after the helicopter caught fire, while a young girl and her mother who are now admitted at Parirenyatwa Hospital in Harare sustained serious burns.

Air Force of Zimbabwe commander Air Marshal Elson Moyo issued a statement Friday evening offering his condolences saying names of the deceased would be announced once their relatives have been notified. 

However, Mapiye’s friends have been paying tribute to the history-making pilot on social media. A friend said:

She recently gave birth and this fact alone has devastated everyone who knew her and worked with her.

The Air Force said the crew, who took off from Manyame Air Force Base, was on a “general handling training sortie” over Seke and Domboshava when they lost contact, triggering a search and rescue effort.

Air Marshal Moyo said an air accident investigation would begin immediately to establish what caused the crash.

Mapiye joined the Air Force in 2012 at the age of 21.

The unidentified technician who also died in the chopper crash
Pindula news ANNITA MAPIYE PILOT PREGNANT
Pindula News Annita Mapiye
Pindula News Annita Mapiye Pilot airforce

In a 2019 interview, she said:

The road to where I am today was not a walk in the park. We were training with men, carrying out the same duties with them, and we were expected to perform equally.

That’s when I told myself that I can do what men can do, and that became my everyday motto, and the motto kept me going.

Mapiye came fifth in the basic military training out of 46 trainees but would fly until 2015 when she sat in the cockpit of a Genet SF260 Fixed Wing.

She advised other women and girls that they should always think positively of themselves and be innovative for change, build their lives, think smart and be confident.

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