Sunday, February 16, 2025

FIRST WITH SECURITY NEWS

Meet female police diver Warrant Officer Charlene Van der Berg

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The South African Police Service (SAPS) observed Women’s Month in August by celebrating its women in blue, who not only go beyond the call of duty, but who also continue to break barriers in male dominated environments.

The service highlighted Warrant Officer Charlene Van der Berg, the only female police diver attached to the Water Police and Diving Services Unit in Sedibeng, Gauteng province.

Forty-two-year-old van der Berg hails from Springs and joined the Service in 2002 as a student constable. She underwent a stint in the SAPS Bike Squad before joining the Water Wing after completing a Commercial Divers Level IV Course in 2014.

As a police diver, van der Berg’s duties include attending to various water related incidents including search and rescue operations. Van der Berg said the majority of her work as a police diver takes place in water with zero visibility. She added that she uses her sense of touch, often in depths shallower than 10 metres.

“I am required to enter water conditions that are extreme or challenging. If there is a potential to save a life I never hesitate to jump in”, said van der Berg.

To date, van der Berg accumulated about 120 dives which calculates roughly to 64.5 hours. This includes diving operations to recover bodies, firearms and exhibits along with search and rescue missions and training exercises.

In 2016, van der Berg played an instrumental role as part of the team that was deployed for a search and rescue operation during the flash floods in Johannesburg. During this incident, several vehicles were swept away by strong currents, and people lost their lives. The team managed to rescue several people and retrieved vehicles.

In 2018 van der Berg and her colleagues were also deployed to assist during the flash floods in the Free State province. They rescued children from a bus which was stuck in a low-lying bridge on a flooded road and put their lives at risk in a fast-flowing water to save the lives of a father and his daughter by means of rope work. The team also rescued three men stranded on top of a vehicle while drifting off in the fast-flowing water.

Van der Berg was also part of the team of six members who were awarded with monetary awards and commendation certificates for the sterling work done and putting their lives at risk to rescue and save lives during the flash floods, the SAPS said.

“If I had to think of all the dangers that I sometimes experienced, I will not be doing what I am doing if it is not my calling. I am committed and dedicated to my work, I care for people and their families. I would also not hesitate to dive to save a life in danger”, van der Berg said.

Throughout her career, van der Berg said even if her job is about risking her life, facing danger of the unknown when diving in the dark water, she will continue doing it.

“After my first dive I knew I had not only found my calling; I had also discovered a world full of unlimited possibilities. I am very proud to be a member of the SAPS Water and Diving Services and to perform diving duties. But the most rewarding part of my job as a police diver is bringing closures to families by reuniting them with their loved ones”, she said.

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