Mohamed was a teacher for several years, teaching French, history and geography in different high schools and colleges in the Comoros. In August 1991, she became the first Comorian woman to be appointed to a senior government role, as Secretary of State for Population and the Condition of Women, by President
Said Mohamed Djohar. In the 11th Meeting of the UN
Conference on Women in Beijing in September 1995, Mohamed noted that significant progress in "mainstreaming women" had been made in the Comoros, with a woman appointed to the Supreme Court, and women in the National Assembly, but that the country needed greater financial commitments from the developed world to address poverty, malnutrition and infectious disease. In 2001, she was called a "dedicated activist". Sittou Raghadat Mohamed is currently secretary general of the political party
Rally for Democracy and Renewal (RDR), and a municipal councilor for the town of Ouani (Ndzuwani-Comoros). ==References==