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March 21, 2007

 

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Lubna Al-Olayan speaking at the Khadija bint Khuwailid Forum in Jeddah on Mar 19, 2007. (AN photo by Khidr Al-Zahrani)

 

Saudi Businesswomen Seek Greater Participation

Editor's Note 

A forum, titled "The Reality of Women's Participation in National Development," highlighting the role of Saudi Arabian women in the business sector was held in Jeddah this week. The event, sponsored by the Khadija bint Khuwailid Center for Businesswomen of Jeddah Chamber of Commerce & Industry (JCCI), was aimed at developing future projects to assist women in business and to showcase role models for women business executives and entrepreneurs. A number of reports carried by Arab News, the largest English language daily in the Middle East, provided details on the issues and discussions. Today we are pleased to share one of these reports with you and to provide links to other articles on the forum.

A forum, titled "The Reality of Women's Participation in National Development," highlighting the role of Saudi Arabian women in the business sector was held in Jeddah this week. The event, sponsored by the Khadija bint Khuwailid Center for Businesswomen of Jeddah Chamber of Commerce & Industry (JCCI), was aimed at developing future projects to assist women in business and to showcase role models for women business executives and entrepreneurs. A number of reports carried by Arab News, the largest English language daily in the Middle East, provided details on the issues and discussions. Today we are pleased to share one of these reports with you and to provide links to other articles on the forum.

 

�Women�s Empowerment a Must�
Hassna�a Mokhtar, Arab News 

JEDDAH, 20 March 2007 � Princess Adelah bint Abdullah ibn Abdul Aziz and Lubna Al-Olayan expressed their concerns and worries at the first session of the Khadija bint Khuwailid Forum yesterday. Both stressed that without utilizing 100 percent of Saudi society�s talents and abilities, the country would never develop, compete internationally or witness any real national economic growth.

�The situation has resulted in more than SR60 billion leaving the Kingdom because of expatriates being employed,� said Al-Olayan. �I believe that we could save a third of this amount by increasing employment opportunities for women and then reinvesting the money to benefit our society.�

Sheikha Nadia bint Khaled Al-Dossary receives an acknowledgment plaque from JCCI Chairman Saleh Al-Turki, right, and Arab News Editor in Chief Khaled Almaeena at the Khadija bint Khuwailid Forum. (AN photo by Khidr Al-Zahrani)    Princess Adelah estimated the Kingdom�s current work force to number 11.5 million and anticipated that the figure would rise to 21 million in 2020. �Women�s unemployment is estimated at between 25 and 28 percent,� she said. �We have to open the door for women in the fields of energy and transportation. Women have to be included in the decision-making process.�

Al-Olayan identified five major points which are vital to the success of businesswomen. They are: providing the education that is really needed; providing opportunities for training women equal to those available for men in banks and companies such as ARAMCO and SABIC; encouraging women to take the initiative and then rewarding them; ensuring continuous support and encouragement by family members and colleagues; having the same rights and benefits men have � equal legal rights, easy transportation, the freedom to reach official institutions and the freedom to benefit from the legal system and the law.

�We don�t live in this world alone. We don�t want to and we can�t live isolated from everyone else,� said Al-Olayan. �Even though we�re stepping forward, many countries who were once behind us are ahead of us now. It�s time that we stopped talking and started working to educate and train our Saudi sisters and daughters while preserving our Islamic identity.� The World Economic Forum�s Global Gender Gap Report measures the size of the gender gap in four critical areas of inequality between men and women: economic participation and opportunity, educational attainment, political empowerment and health and survival. According to the 2006 report, Saudi Arabia ranked last in a group of 115 countries in terms of economic participation and opportunity and political empowerment.

Souad Al-Hakeem, professor of philosophy in the Faculty of Arts and Human Sciences at Lebanon University, tackled the problem of Muslim women being an international model. Her theme boiled down to one point: Islamic laws and Shariah do not stand in the way or hinder the process of advancement for women but traditions and customs do.

�We have to stop accusing Islam of holding women back and saying that it is blocking the way for achieving an international role-model,� said Al-Hakeem. �Women are partners of men in life and in destiny and the Muslim woman in particular is the man�s partner in everything.�

Source: Arab News


Additional Articles

Saudi Businesswomen Seek Greater Participation
Razan Baker, Arab News 
JEDDAH, 20 March 2007 � Saudi women highlighted yesterday the obstacles facing them in being economically productive members of the society. During the final and third session of the first day of Khadija Bint Khuwailid Forum being held at the Jeddah Hilton Hotel, women participants spoke openly about their perceptions on improving their business participation for the betterment of the economy.
[Complete article]

Education and Training Key to Women�s Empowerment
Siraj Wahab, Arab News
JEDDAH, 21 March 2007 � Education and training are the two most important elements in the empowerment of women, said Jeddah Chamber of Commerce and Industry Chairman Saleh Al-Turki, who was speaking yesterday at the Khadija bint Khuwailid Forum for Saudi Businesswomen at Jeddah Hilton.
[Complete article]

Revision of School Curricula Vital in Boosting the Role of Women
Razan Baker & Lulwa Shalhoub, Arab News
JEDDAH, 21 March 2007 � Revision of school curricala to keep abreast of the developments is essential in boosting the role of women in nation building, participants in the Khadija bint Khuwailid Forum here said in concert yesterday.
[Complete article]

JCCI Center for Women in Business to Host Forum
Lulwa Shalhoub, Arab News 
JEDDAH, 2 March 2007 � Princess Adilah bint Abdullah will host a forum sponsored by the Khadija bint Khuwailid Center for Businesswomen of Jeddah Chamber of Commerce & Industry (JCCI) on March 19-20 at the Jeddah Hilton Hotel. The forum, titled �The Reality of Women�s Participation in National Development� will focus on Muslim women in business.
[Complete article]

 

"Women have always been represented, especially in business. I think all Saudis have business and trade in their blood, because this is how we survived. Before the unification of the country when we were tribes and nomads, trade was the only thing that kept us alive." Princess Loulwa al-Faisal

 

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