Create Account

Username
Password
Remember me
Email
 
3

Women-only City Planned for Saudi Arabia

8 comments, 169 views, posted 7:19 pm 13/08/2012 in News by evolution
evolution has 6833 posts, 2858 threads, 521 points
Team Van Helsing

No man's land: Women-only city planned for Saudi Arabia to allow more and more females to pursue a career
PUBLISHED: 13:52 EST, 11 August 2012 | UPDATED: 20:58 EST, 12 August 2012
By David Baker

Saudi Arabia is planning to build a new city exclusively for women as it bids to combine strict Sharia law and career minded females, pursuing work.

It is thought the Saudi Industrial Property Authority (Modon) has been asked to bring the country up to date with the rest of the modern world with the controversial city, which is now being designed with construction to begin next year.

It is hoped it will allow women’s desire to work without defying the country’s Islamic laws.

There will be women-run firms and production lines for women.

Although Saudi Sharia law does not prohibit women to work figures show that only 15 per cent of women are represented in the workforce.

The plan coincides with the governments ambitions to get women to play a more active part in the development of the country. Among the stated objectives are to create jobs, particularly for younger women.

'I'm sure that women can demonstrate their efficiency in many aspects and clarify the industries that best suits their interests, their nature and their ability', Modon’s deputy director-general, Saleh Al-Rasheed, told Saudi daily newspaper al-Eqtisadiah.

Saudi’s existing industrial cities already have factories owned by women, as well as companies that employ a small portion of the female population and Saleh Al Rasheed added: 'We are now working on a second industrial city for women.

'We have plans to establish a number of women-only industries in various parts of the kingdom'.

As part of a mass overhaul of its workforce and its bid to get women into work the state is also attempting to replace foreign salespeople with Saudi women.

This summer, women started replacing staff in cosmetics and perfume shops, only half a year after they replaced male sales staff in lingerie stores.

But despite some progress, women's rights in Saudi Arabia are still defined by Islam and lack basic freedoms found in many Western cultures.

Last September, King Abdullah announced that women will be able to vote and run in the 2015 local elections but Saudi Arabia is still the only country in the world that prohibits women from driving and it took huge efforts from the International Olympic Committee to persuade them to enter women in the Games for the first time ever.

Wojdan Shaherkani's Olympics lasted just over a minute, but the fact she made it to her judo bout with Puerto Rico's Melissa Mojica meant it was a revolutionary moment for the women of Saudi Arabia.

The country's ultra-conservative clergy tried to destroy her ambitions to be Saudi's first female Olympian, before an argument about the type of headscarf she should wear jeopardised her place at the eleventh hour.

The Games in London were also a first for Afghanistan, also bound by strict law, when Tahmina Kohistani ran in the 100m, despite months of harassment from men who believed she should not be allowed to compete.

http://www.dailymail.co.uk/news/article-2187072/Saudi-Arabia-Women-city-planned-allow-more-females-pursue-career.html

Comments

2
7:25 pm 13/08/2012

Flee

Im undecided on whether or not this is progress. Its better than what women in Saudi currently have, but it still sucks.

1
8:28 pm 13/08/2012

djskitzy

it's not a step backwards, therefore, it is progress..... and they should be applauded for it, as they are derided for the opposite....

1
12:55 am 14/08/2012

z0phi3l

Quote by djskitzy:
it's not a step backwards, therefore, it is progress..... and they should be applauded for it, as they are derided for the opposite....



More like a sidestep with a small step in the general right direction, but better than the current setup

1
10:52 pm 14/08/2012

djskitzy

Quote by z0phi3l:
Quote by djskitzy:
it's not a step backwards, therefore, it is progress..... and they should be applauded for it, as they are derided for the opposite....


More like a sidestep with a small step in the general right direction, but better than the current setup


so your point is you agree, but you just can't allow yourself to say it out loud?

1
12:16 am 15/08/2012

Cnik

knowledge without mileage = bullshit......

we can't judge until we go there.......

0
2:23 am 15/08/2012

Giggles

some of the men are here in the USA that don't let woman go to the bathroom in the gas-stations they work at ! ! ! I just don't get gas there nor do any of my friends or family. The bull-crap is here too. I don't think it's a step up or a sidestep it's a nice try only.

0
3:33 am 18/08/2012

elsels

I think this could be good for them. Get the weapons industry and turn that country uside down because one armed angry oppressed woman could be worth 100 soldiers. Then real change can occur.

0
4:41 am 18/08/2012

Quaektem

Quote by Giggles:
some of the men are here in the USA that don't let woman go to the bathroom in the gas-stations they work at



That may be for you're protection... imagine the last time they cleaned it!

Add Comment

Log in via teoti, or register to add a comment!