Haleem trained to be a nurse, including a one-year fellowship at the
Australian College of Nursing in
Melbourne, becoming the first Maldivian woman to complete higher studies in nursing. She became a matron in the government hospital in
Malé in 1963 and a member of the Royal College of Nursing. In the
1974 parliamentary elections she was a candidate in Malé and became the first woman elected to the
People's Majlis. In January 1977 she was appointed Minister of Health by President
Ibrahim Nasir, becoming the first female minister in the country. When the Majlis was due to elect a new president in 1978, it was widely believed that Haleem would have won if the constitution had not prevented women holding the post. On 1 April she was formally banished for four years on a charge of sedition. Her husband and children remained in the Maldives, After the Maldivian government requested she be put under surveillance, she was asked to leave Sri Lanka and moved to London, where she stayed with a friend of her sister. Haleem was unable to work in the United Kingdom unless she requested political asylum, which she did not want to do, in case it impacted her family in the Maldives. Instead she relocated to
Kuwait to work at a hospital. Shortly after her move, the
Iran–Iraq War started and she returned to London for five months, before going back to Kuwait. After discovering that the Maldivian government's only aim was to stop her returning home, she was able to move to
Colombo in Sri Lanka, where she was joined by her children and mother. She eventually returned to the Maldives in 2008 after newly elected president
Mohamed Nasheed (who succeeded Gayoom) called her and told her she could come home. ==References==