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Meet Bomet’s first female heavy equipment operator

Meet Bomet’s first female heavy equipment operator
Emma Saina, an Ecolog Forwarder Operator with James Finlay Company Ltd in Kericho county. – Photo/KNA
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The advent of modern technology is now giving women opportunities to work in fields previously dominated by men. 

Subsequently, the society is currently witnessing a new crop of women with big dreams and determination to break all stereotypes as well as old fashioned traditions hampering women from engaging in progressive nation building.

Such is the story of 37-year-old Emma Saina, a mother of one from Sotik sub-county in Bomet county, who opted to pursue her passion to operate an Ecolog Forwarder Machine, a job widely perceived to be a preserve of men, due to its energy sapping nature.

A Forwarder is a forestry vehicle that carries big felled logs from the stump to a roadside landing.

Saina is a Forwarder Operator with the James Finlay Company Limited, Forestry Department, after securing the job in 2010. 

As you watch her drive the Sh70 million Ecolog Forwarder Machine with ease as she keenly move the sized logs to the stacking site, one can only marvel at the strength of women in growing the country’s economy.

Saina took the tough choice of pursuing her passion of driving earth moving machines and ensuring the tree trunks are neatly put into a pile of 25 cubic metres high, after she graduated from Kenya Forestry Service College, upon taking a three-year diploma course in Forestry from 2007-2010.  

Previous background

With her passion and interest in forest conservation, she enrolled  for a course  as an Ecology Forwarder in 2014 and completed the two-year course at the James Finlay Company Limited that offered women empowerment programme.

Upon graduation, she was transferred from the Mensuration Department where she worked as a clerk at the Forestry Department before moving to the Logging Unit. 

“My previous background in forestry gave me a solid foundation in driving my passion.

The Forestry Department protects the 10,000 hectares under trees from the time they are planted to when they are harvested.

I am happy that the two-year training equipped me with relevant skills and knowledge on how to operate heavy earth moving machines and I do not regret the move,” she said.

Saina revealed that she had always wanted to pursue a career in operating earthmovers and was inspired to venture into the field from watching her father plough the family’s shamba using his tractor.

 “As a child, I loved anything mechanical due to the fact that I grew up watching my father use his tractor to plough our shamba and when he would complete the job, he would leave it parked at our homestead. I would then climb and sit on the chair and play with all its gears,” she said. 

She hopes women countrywide will continue to debunk myriad of stereotypes placed on their way and embark on laying greater emphasis on education of girls who want to pursue careers in science and technology. 

“My work starts very early in the morning by first checking my machine grease, other possible defaults and using the checklist I log to note everything down before embarking on the day’s activities from 6.30am to 1.30pm.

Right attitude

This has always been my passion. When you have the right attitude you will go far. As women, we need to believe more in our abilities and ourselves.

At the office we are only two women against six operators but we endeavour to work as a team,” said Saina.

Her full time job enables her to fend for herself and teenage daughter as well as her other family members back home.

The Company General Manager Corporate Affairs, Sammy Kirui, reiterated that they seek to support women, as they too are capable of doing jobs once reserved for men.

 “The women plant operators are now fully conversant even with the very complicated machines through our gender empowerment programmes that was initiated in 2014,” said Kirui.

However, Saina acknowledges that working in a male dominated field comes with its own unique challenges that require one to embrace certain principles to survive. — KNA

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