Saudi Women Win Awards at the 2015 British Inventors Awards

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Four Saudi female students from Princess Nora bint Abdulrahman University were awarded the Diamond, Gold and Platinum medals in the British Invention Show and Awards for 2015, which was held in London from October 21 to 24.

Bedour Al-Maghrabi, Maha Al-Qahtani and Thekra Al-Otaibi came in first position, while Mariam Al-Otaibi and Bedour Al-Maghrabi received the diamond and platinum awards.


The first-ranked invention was a device for sense rehabilitation and stimulation in patients with sensory neuropathy issues. The basic premise of the devise is based on the innovation of a new multisensory stimulation program; a new treatment program using different senses to help people with impaired sensory systems improve the affected cell's function.


The same invention was ranked in second place at Korea's International Women's Invention Exposition (KIWIE) in 2014.


Al-Maghrabi and Al-Qahtani invented glasses for people with cerebral blindness which can help them to identify anything around them. The glasses draw a picture of the area around the patient and defines it through spoken words after analyzing it through a mobile app and sending it through an earpiece.


This invention took out second place and the silver medal at the Korean International Women's Invention Exposition (KIWIE) in 2015, and also received a gold medal from the Indonesian Invention and Innovation Promotion Association.


The Saudi ambassador to the United Kingdom, Prince Mohammed bin Nawaf, who visited the Saudi pavilion on the first day of the expo, expressed his admiration for the Saudi women's ability to innovate and raise the Saudi standing in such international specialized forums.


He thanked the efforts of the Saudi government in supporting and encouraging science, education and scholarship programs, giving them the top priority among its national development initiatives.


The ambassador urged the inventors to continue their careers serving their country and humanity, saying: "Nations are not built on dreams, but on work, effort and diligence."


The students thanked the Saudi government, the ambassador as well as Princess Nora University's staff for their continuous support. They also participated in the fifth and sixth scientific conferences for higher education students in the Kingdom, and are members of the Saudi Society of Physiotherapy. Additionally, they are founding members of the Scientific Research and Innovation Club, and the Physiotherapy Club at the Princess Nora University.

Originally Published on Arab News 

Saudi Woman Launches Phone Repair Centre

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A Saudi woman says she had repaired nearly 48,000 mobile phones in just one year following the launching of maintenance services as the first women-only phone repair centre in the conservative oil-rich Gulf Kingdom.

Mariam Al Subaei said she provides mobile phone repair and maintenance services at her centre in the capital Riyadh only for women and that she receives between 90 and 120 handsets for servicing every day.

“I began personally nine years ago and trained myself on such services.I wanted to help our women and prevent the others from blackmailing them. I now have a centre for servicing all types of mobiles and laptops,” she told ‘Sabq’ newspaper. My family encouraged and supported me and all my female customers were very helpful and encouraging. That is why I expanded and succeeded in this career.”

She said her centre, which is manned only by female technicians, serviced nearly 48,000 mobile phones in 2014 and expected the number to be higher this year.

“My dream now is to launch a national project for the maintenance and repairing of electronic devices that will serve women through the country,” she said

Originally published on Emirates 24/7

Dr. Thoraya Obaid Awarded UN Population Fund Award

Dr. Obaid received the UNFPA Award from the Deputy Security-General, H.E. Jan Eliassion

Dr. Obaid received the UNFPA Award from the Deputy Security-General, H.E. Jan Eliassion

Dr. Thoraya Obaid, member of the Shoura Council, received United Nations Population Fund award in recognition of her role in the field of population and health, and her activity in the field of women's rights. Dr. Obaid is a lifelong champion of women’s and young people’s heath and empowerment. She joined the UN Economic and Social Commission for Western Asia (ESCWA) in 1975, focusing on the link between women’s empowerment and population dynamics. In 1998, she joined UNFPA, and eventually rose to the rank of Executive Director. 

Originally Published on Saudi Gazette 

Competition to Promote Entrepreneurship Among Saudi Women Launched

Princess Banderi Bint Abdulrahman Al Faisal, Director General of the King Khalid Foundation, and  Mohamed Al Ayed, TRACCS CEO, sign the strategic partnership agreement in Riyadh

Princess Banderi Bint Abdulrahman Al Faisal, Director General of the King Khalid Foundation, and  Mohamed Al Ayed, TRACCS CEO, sign the strategic partnership agreement in Riyadh

JEDDAH — Building on the theme of “promoting the spirit of enterprise” and with a key focus on social entrepreneurship development across the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia, the King Khalid Foundation and TRACCS signed a strategic partnership agreement to launch the Jeddah Entrepreneurship Meet and Competition.  The competition is a unique program that opens doors for all budding entrepreneurs to present their ideas or existing business modules to be eligible for its mentorship and funding program.  

Enhancing the development and understanding of social entrepreneurship the King Khalid Foundation will serve as the strategic partner for the social entrepreneurship category.  Encompassing a systematic participation, assessment, evaluation and training program the King Khalid Foundation and TRACCS have designed a specific process for this category.  

The Jeddah Entrepreneurs Meet and Competition is an entrepreneurial development and sustainability promoting platform open for women across the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia to present innovative business ideas or existing businesses within three categories:  social entrepreneurship, manufacturing and production and educational and lifestyle development.  

The competition allows all potential candidates to apply online on www.jem-yje.com and go through the assessment and evaluation process before participating in select workshops and sessions in order to present their business ideas to the judging committee for the selection of the winners in each of the categories.  

“Social entrepreneurship is an avenue of key importance to us at the King Khalid Foundation and our partnership with TRACCS to launch the Jeddah Entrepreneurship Meet and Competition is centered on that segment as such.  Social entrepreneurship isn’t about launching an idea or doing a community initiative as such it takes on a much bigger role in identifying a challenge and innovating a solution that is applicable, achievable and sustainable,” said Princess Banderi Bint Abdulrahman Al Faisal, Director General of the King Khalid Foundation.  

“As change agents in their communities, social entrepreneurs are a fundamental aspect in the social and business arena in the Kingdom and will help identify the opportunities, open doors for innovative solutions and allow them to create solutions that help improve society,” she added.  

As one of the leading roles models in philanthropic and development work, impacting people’s lives by providing innovative solutions to critical socio economic challenges in Saudi Arabia, the King Khalid Foundation support programs  in Saudi Arabia  leader and role models the King Khalid Foundation partners with organizations to initiate and establish such programs through its grant funding.  Within the past three years, the Foundation has awarded 21 grants to organizations across Saudi Arabia, reaching over 64,000 beneficiaries.  

“The Jeddah Entrepreneurs Meet and Competition is a unique program with a unique offering and benefits that is open for entrepreneurs across the Kingdom,” said Mohamed Al Ayed, TRACCS CEO.  

He added “JEM brings together know-how, on-hand experience and seed money for provisional funding, giving each entrepreneur the success factors to be able to work and grow her business.  And our partnership with the King Khalid Foundation is an important element that showcases partnerships between the public, private and NGO organizations are how successes are built and how such collaborations are of benefit for sustainable and development programs that support the economic growth, open new business avenues and help in job creation and employment.”

“We thank the King Khalid Foundation for their unwavering support and partnership to take social entrepreneurship and JEM into greater heights,” he further said.

Serving as a platform for budding entrepreneurs, venture capitalists, financial, business entities, and governmental and business leaders to interact, foster and promote a culture of business development in Saudi Arabia the Jeddah Entrepreneurs Meet and Competition has officially launched.  

Participants can apply online and go through the process of assessment and an independent judging committee to receive their funding and 18-month mentorship program will identify selection before the final winners announcement is made at the end of the year with winners in the three set categories.

“We are excited to witness the second phase of JEM and look forward to seeing more success stories that are integral components of the business and social community.  To create the diversity in the business spectrum engaging in economic and job creation availability a society needs a strong SME base and programs such as JEM can help make an impact through the partnerships developed and the business opportunities at hand,” said Sarah Al Ayed, TRACCS Co-Founder and Board member and Chair of the Jeddah Entrepreneurs Meet and Competition.   

riginally published on Saudi Gazette 

Licenses for 267 Women Lawyers Approved and Renewed

  

  

The Ministry of Justice has issued and renewed 267 licenses for Saudi lawyers including six women during the second quarter of this year, according to a report released on Monday.

The licenses included 117 for men, with further renewals for 144 law firms. The country has 3,147 lawyers, which includes 48 women practitioners, the report stated.

A source said that the ministry had rejected 20 requests for licenses because the applicants failed to meet basic criteria to practice the profession. Three incomplete applications are still pending.

Meanwhile, the ministry has handed over eight people to the Bureau of Investigation and Prosecution for practicing without qualifications. 

A further 30 have been reported for handling more than three cases simultaneously.

The source said the ministry’s inspectors had discovered several violations by practitioners in Riyadh, Eastern Province, Madinah and others areas.

Originally Published on Arab News

Eighty Women to Run for Saudi Arabia’s Eastern Province Council

There are over 80 women running for the Saudi Arabian Eastern Province city council elections in August with at least 10 female candidates contesting places on each municipal committee, a social activist told Al-Hayat.

Fowziyah Al-Hani of the “Baladi” campaign, which works to increase women’s representation in the city council, said female participation in the Shoura Council has improved Saudi society.

She believed more women in the city council would help societal development as well. She said: “I believe the Saudi woman will be a complementary addition to the city councils in the Kingdom.

“A lot of women are apprehensive about nominating themselves. They fear their agendas and plans would be stolen by other candidates if they were publicized.”

She added women candidates would always be under the spotlight in the election and their private lives exposed. “It is financially and emotionally exhausting to campaign and challenge social norms.

“Not everyone can afford such a cost but the women who nominated themselves have great courage and I wish them all the best and thank them for their initiative.”

She added no women participated in the 2012 elections, driving her to organize an awareness workshop for women in cooperation with the Alwaleed Bin Talal Foundation.

“We had a great turnout in 2012 and we will hold the workshops again this year with bigger hopes and more improvements.

“In 2012, we were introducing the concept and importance of city council elections and this year will be talking in detail on how to run a successful campaign and to lobby in the municipality.”

Candidate Hanan Al-Daham said she was the first Saudi woman who decided to run for city council after King Abdullah announced that women should participate in the elections.

She said: “I run to serve the citizen, the resident and the country as a whole. “As a citizen, I have a social responsibility and an obligation to give back to my community.

This is my first city council election but it is not the first election I have stood for. I was previously elected as the head of the National Retirees Society.”

She added the Saudi woman is capable of giving back to society and enhance the infrastructure of the Kingdom.

She said: “We will be rivaling men and bringing our perfectionism into good use. My participation in the election does not compromise my religious values and morals as a Saudi Muslim woman.

“Women in the city councils is looking up and many doors will open for us, giving us the opportunity to contribute to the betterment of our society.”

Published on Alarabiya

Measures Under Way to Help Saudi Women Work From Home

Image Source: sapienacountants.com

Image Source: sapienacountants.com

The Council of Saudi Chambers of Commerce and Industry has announced a series of measures to activate a project it had launched earlier to enable women, especially those with special needs, to work from home.

Haifa Al-Hossaini, director of the council’s department for women, said the project would ensure employment for more than 10,000 women every year. “Saudi women from various age groups will be able to work for private companies and establishments from their homes,” she said.

Al-Hossaini said the system was probably new to the Saudi women but is well established in developed Western countries.

An agreement was signed with Glowork, the first website dedicated to female recruitment in the Gulf Cooperation Council (GCC), to provide the modalities and technical support for the project, she said. “Glowork will provide technical support to private companies to stay in constant contact with their female employees and at the same time assess their long-distance performance,” Al-Hossaini said.

Khalid Alkhudair, founder of Glowork, said the company will enable thousands of Saudi women to work from their homes in such fields as research, marketing, customer service, sales and other activities that can be done remotely, whether in towns or villages.

“Women with special needs can easily work from their homes to sustain themselves and help their families,” he said.

He said under the new project, women will not only be able to work from their homes but will become part of the Saudi labor market.

Alkhudair said his company will provide smart solutions to private companies to monitor the performance of Saudi women employees who work from home, including those living in remote areas.

He said the employers would be supplied with accurate reports about the performance and productivity of any woman working from home. “Glowork can be easily linked online with all the employing private firms’ systems,” he said.

Originally published on Saudi Gazette by Ezzeddin Ahmed

400 Saudi Women Graduate From Mobily’s Training Program

SAUDI Minister of Labor Adel bin Mohammed Al Faqih visited Mobily's Female Contact Center in Jeddah recently. Engineer Khalid Al Kaf, MD and CEO of Mobily and a number of company executives welcomed him.

The minister listened to a thorough explanation about the center and how female employees perform their work conveniently in an easy process which takes into account the women's nature and the suitability of their work as being compliant to the Islamic terms and conditions.

Al Kaf explained the role played by Mobily toward the female community through the provision of all necessary means to create a distinctive and convenient  work environment that suits the nature of women and meet their requirements. He added that Mobily already recruited more than 700 Saudi woman and about 320 of them work in customer service.

A brief explanation on the customers service representatives program for women to operate from  home, which was launched by Mobily and seeks to overcome all the difficulties hindering women to get engaged in the labor market through providing the possibility of working  from their homes.

The Minister of Labor was briefed on Mobily's program to train the girls on the maintenance of mobiles.

Al Faqih sponsored earlier the graduation of the first batch of 400 girls in the program, in collaboration with the National Institute Specialist Training for Women in Jeddah. The program is targeting to train 1,000 Saudi girls on the programming and maintenance of mobile phones over the next three years. 

Mobily is keen on empowering female employees to work in different sections taking into account the suitability to their nature and privacy. They are currently working in different sections like collection, companies, customer care, quality control, social communication, technical support, work from home and contact center 1100. 

Originally published on Saudi Gazette

Arab Women Leadership and Business Summit

Dubai is set to host The Arab Women Leadership and Business Summit, an event sponsored by the Dubai Business Women Council, the Kuwait Chamber of Commerce and the American Chamber of Commerce, from September 22 to 23.
The two-day event aims to enhance the role of women in various areas of professional growth through providing them with information, strategies, insights and perspectives on leadership development.
The summit will include sessions, group discussions and interactive meetings with the focus on strengthening the financial, legal and political status of women in business.
A survey, which was conducted by the Organization for Economic Cooperation and Development recently, found that the percentage of Arab women in leadership positions has increased in the past decade. 
Yet, it also noted that there is still much to be done to strengthen women involvement, adding that a continuous support in the Arab world for women’s participation is needed in all sectors.

Originally published on Arab News

Women Employees Reshape Saudi Arabia's Labor Market

Over the past five years, many dramatic shifts have taken place within Saudi Arabia, including the introduction of the kingdom's first co-ed university, the multibillion-dollar King Abdullah Science and Technology University (known as KAUST). Also, there are now weekly exhibitions at galleries that have opened across the country, notable in a society where artistic expression has traditionally been kept private.

According to Reuters, the country has become the biggest per-capita user of YouTube in the world, with Saudi-produced comedy shows and stand-up being widely popular. The satirical video “No Woman, No Drive” — inspired by Bob Marley’s “No Woman, No Cry” — made by Saudi comedians to mock the driving ban on women recently went viral. While nearly 80% of the population work for the government, many of the country’s younger generation are opting for a more entrepreneurial path, becoming part of a growing number of technology incubators.

This increasingly tech- and social media-savvy culture has also paved the way for new activists to emerge. One example: Jeddah-based wealth manager Reem Asaad. After Asaad launched what is known as the “Lingerie Campaign” on Facebook to launch trainings for women to work in retail, King Abdullah signed a decree banning men from working in all lingerie and cosmetics shops. The new law not only created tens of thousands of jobs for women, it also has helped boost sales for retailers, says Reema Bint Bandar Al Saud, CEO and president of Alfa International, which owns the license to Harvey Nichols Riyadh as well as the US clothing company Splendid. Al Saud also launched a luxury bag line called Baraboux designed specifically for working women.

With the exception of accessories and shoes, where sales have stayed the same, she has seen earnings increase in every other department, thanks to female employees. “In this type of society, it’s very hard for a man to make a sales pitch to a woman [about] how a red dress is her color,” Al Saud notes. When Al Saud went to her board to get a transportation stipend approved for women employees who may have difficulty getting to work otherwise, she says it was an easy sell after she showed that women often earn back three times the amount of their daily stipend from a single sale.

Teaching ‘soft skills’

Al Saud has also invested in training for female employees that goes well beyond basic retail skills such as how to use a cash register and customer service. Working with many international brands, her staff receives English language instruction so they can better understand marketing materials. Many of the women come from environments where they typically haven’t interacted with men outside of their immediate family, Al Saud notes, so “soft skills” training is also needed.

“We train women on how to interact in a professional capacity with [both] males and females,” she says. In addition, as most of her female employees are completely new to the workforce, she offers training in financial management, career planning, salary scales, benefits, and concepts such as performance pay. She emphasizes the notion that success goes beyond personal sales but also encompasses the performance of the whole store. Employees learn that they “can send a client over to [their] teammates so they will find” whatever they need.

Al Saud also prepares trainees to deal with customers who are not necessarily supportive of the fact that they are working. “We had a woman come in the other day and tell a [female employee] working in our accessories department that she should be ashamed of working in a mixed environment,” she says.

Harvey Nichols and other retailers must follow the strict guidelines laid out by Saudi Arabia’s Ministry of Labor, which include an actual measurement of how close male and female employees can stand from one another. For example, they can’t work together at the same counter. In an open space, for every one male, there must be three female employees so the two genders never find themselves in a one-on-one ratio. Additionally, the company break rooms are kept completely apart and are designated strictly male or strictly female. As the inclusion of women workers in retail is a new development in Saudi society, Al Saud says the rules of the ministry make sense to her and she follows them very closely.

Charting a path

Among the provisions not currently part of federal law, but which Asaad and other activists would like to see become a requirement, are nurseries for employees’ children. Al Saud provides that benefit at her company; her female employees are typically in their early thirties with two children. While some of the women are married, others are divorced and often struggle to find work that fits in with their children’s schedules. Even male employees bring their children to the nursery, often to give their wives a break.

While providing solutions to make it easier for women to take a job, Al Saud faced the challenge of altering the prevailing view that the service industry is for foreign workers, not native Saudis. Her company partnered with Glowork, Saudi Arabia’s first female recruiting platform (which was recently acquired by SAS Holdings), and launched a campaign called, “You are my pride,” which highlighted women in the workplace, especially those in retail. “We wanted to emphasize that [although] you’re embarking on a career path and may start as sales woman, [you] could end up in more senior roles,” Al Saud notes.

Al Saud is an advocate of working women, but she sees her work as a way to bring women to an equal level to that of men — not at their expense. For example, rather than simply firing her male employees in sales after women were granted the right to work, Al Saud gave her top male performers a chance to work in marketing, utilizing their past experience on the sales floor. “I don’t want to look back five years [from now] and say there are all these phenomenal women, but we’ve ignored the men,” she says.

Asaad agrees, and notes that campaigns to elevate women are also helping to create a culture of productivity throughout all of Saudi society. “It’s about women working, and also having a generation 10 to 20 years down the line that is not dependent on foreign labor and has working role models to look up to,” Asaad says.

Breaking barriers

According to a report conducted by Cisco, 78% of unemployed women have graduate degrees, and 30% of those looking for work can’t find it. But women are finding jobs in an increasing number of sectors that traditionally have not employed females, including defense, agriculture, customs, airports, and information technology. In fact, in today’s Saudi work landscape, women employees work in all ministries. In the banking headquarters, where Asaad works, there is no segregation of the sexes as in most other sectors, thanks to the Central Bank having immunity from religious authorities.

Another area where women have the opportunity to thrive is in technology. Sarah Al Mubarak, a financial consultant at the Badir Program for Technology Incubator — where close to 30% of entrepreneurs served are women — has been working to grow the angel investing community within the Kingdom.

According to Al Mubarak, initially it was hard to convince investors to put their money in startups rather than investing in real estate and the stock exchange. Those who invest often see it as a philanthropic endeavor, rather than one focused on returns. In turn, many entrepreneurs don’t want to give away equity to angel investors and would rather bootstrap or take debt financing from the government. Al Mubarak notes that getting financing from the government is a lengthy process that can take up to a year; it is also typically very difficult for a technology business to get approval since the firms often don’t have physical assets.

There are other challenges as well. A female entrepreneur whom the Badir program has worked with was offered debt financing from the government only if she shifted her manufacturing from China to Saudi Arabia, which she refused to do. Al Mubarak says Badir is trying to get the government to change its approach and to understand that it can put a young startup out of business if the firm is restricted to manufacturing in Saudi Arabia, where costs are much higher.

While there are funds for women in micro-business, Al Mubarak notes that there needs to be more support for women with companies in areas such as e-commerce, bio-technology, advanced manufacturing and mobile apps.

“Before the oil industry came, nearly everyone in the Kingdom was an entrepreneur whether they worked in farming, trading, finance or [owned] stores,” says Al Mubarak. She believes that as more women — and men — are able to find success as entrepreneurs, the culture in Saudi Arabia will continue to change.

Published on Wamda

Mobily to Graduate 400 Female Interns

Mobily will graduate 400 Saudi women as telecom technicians in a ceremony on Wednesday. Labor Minister Adel Fakeih will attend the graduation ceremony.

The women completed a series of courses in programming and maintenance of mobile phones as a part of an ambitious project Mobily adopted in 2013 in cooperation with the National Women's Institute in Jeddah. The institute is a one of the high quality institutes supervised by the General Organization for Technical and Vocational Training.

The program aims to train 1,000 Saudi women in the programming and maintenance of mobile phones over the next three years.

Hammoud Al-Ghobaini, executive manager of corporate communications at Mobily, said that this program, will give these women the opportunity to enter the professional, vocational and technical market especially as the Saudi market has a high demand for such specializations, particularly women workers.

Al-Ghobaini said that Mobily embraced this development program in all specialties, because the company believes in the importance of vocational and crafts training for women as it can lead them to setting up their own businesses.

He said that it is important that women be given the opportunity to show their creativity within a suitable environment with the tolerant laws of Islam.

Al- Ghobaini emphasized the importance of the social responsibility of companies. Mobily achieved this by adopting this project in cooperation with various government and private entities.

The women participants were beneficiaries of charity organizations and social institutions in Jeddah and the neighboring provinces and some of them suffer some form disability.

Amani Al-Zayla'i, director-general of the National Specialized Institute for Women's Training, said that participants were trained over past months in an interesting and nontraditional way by Saudi trainees that were specifically trained to work in the institute. This training was carried under the supervision of the Technical and Vocational Training Corporation represented by the Ahli training which provided all the support and advice to ensure the success of this program, which is the first of its kind in the Gulf.

Al-Zayla'i explained that the program comprised three developmental courses including an introduction of maintenance and programming services (applications) as well as hardware maintenance. She added that the program attracted a high number of candidates forcing the institute’s management to narrow the selection process.

The institute cooperated with seven partners from charitable and social bodies which are Al Bir Society Charity in Khlais, Association of Neighborhood Centers Province in Makkah, Women's First Charity Association, Iktifa Society, the National Committee for Prisoners, their Families and Ex-Convicts (Tarahum), the General Administration of Education in Jeddah represented by (the learned neighborhood) and Social Education House for Girls In Jeddah.

Published on Arab News 

On-The-Job Training Chance at GE For Saudi Women Engineers

Following GE’s organized visits to Effat University in Jeddah and its participation at the King Abdullah University of Science & Technology (KAUST) Career Fair, the company has offered on-the-job training opportunities to five Saudi women engineers who will be trained across diverse businesses of the company in the Kingdom.
Hisham Albahkali, GE’s president and CEO for Saudi Arabia and Bahrain, said: “We participate in career fairs and organize student outreach initiatives to identify Saudi youth talent, and to strengthen awareness among students, particularly females, on the array of diverse job opportunities offered by GE in the Kingdom. Providing co-op training opportunities highlights our commitment to diversity and empowering Saudi women in the workplace, which reflects the vision of the government.”
As part of GE’s partnership with different universities in the Kingdom to offer co-op programs to their students, GE has hired four fresh graduate students from Effat University, as co-ops with the GE Power & Water business.
Three of them will join the GE Manufacturing Technology Center in Dammam, and another will join the Power Generation Services business in Jeddah. One Saudi female engineer was hired through GE’s participation at the KAUST Career Fair, who will be training with the GE Oil & Gas business at the GE Saudi Innovation Center for three months.
GE has invested SR22 million over three years to provide annual scholarships that will benefit 60 Saudi university students. Educational scholarships are provided to 30 students of the King Fahd University of Petroleum & Minerals (KFUPM), while 30 scholarships are provided exclusively to female students from various universities in the Kingdom.
With three offices and six facilities, Saudi Arabia accounts for the largest GE work force in the Middle East with over 1,400 employees driving the health care, transportation, power, oil and gas, water, and aviation businesses.

Published on Arab News 

Saudi Healthcare Executive Goes Back to Her Roots

Ms Summer Nasief is healthcare and life-sciences industry executive for IBM.

First working for IBM in 2001, she was performing in IBM America’s top 10 per cent two years ago when she surprised her colleagues by requesting a transfer to Saudi Arabia. After all, it’s not the country of choice for many businesswomen.

For Ms Nasief, working in Saudi meant a return to her roots; she’d grown up in Saudi Bedouin communities with her Saudi father, who built oil refineries, and her American mother. “All my education was in Arabic because my father insisted my upbringing be 100 per cent Saudi. So when at 15 my parents divorced and I moved to the US, I couldn’t read or write English.

“The healthcare industry that I now run for IBM is the biggest industry that money is being spent on today in Saudi Arabia, so IBM was taking a major risk by putting a female in. My selling point was ‘IBM believes in diversity, so why wouldn’t we send a woman to the most culturally complex place in the world?’”

IBM was ranked by the National Association for Female Executives in the US as one of the top 10 companies for females this year.

Ms Nasief persuaded the company she could create a Saudi healthcare industry for them, with an initial six-month budget and a headcount of three. She just had one prerequisite. As a single woman, Ms Nasief knew it would be difficult to live alone so she asked to have a base in Dubai, which she could return to at weekends.

“I cover the entire kingdom for IBM so during the week I’m constantly in and out of hotels,” she says “The swimming pools in the hotels are male-only. There are a small number of female gyms, but they’re very limited in terms of what they have. The advantage of Saudi hotels is it’s where people can sit and eat together, because that’s where most business people reside. So I stay at a hotel in Riyadh with massive grounds, and my friends come have dinner with me at the same hotel restaurant.”

A lack of mobility has hindered the progress of female businesswomen in Saudi Arabia, where women are banned from driving. It means Ms Nasief has to rely on drivers to get around.

But she is not the only Saudi female in the healthcare industry, as it’s a more culturally acceptable field for women to work in.

“When I first started going to meetings, I wore the abaya and the sheila to fit in. As I started feeling more comfortable, I would put my sheila around my shoulders. As I got to know my clients better, I learnt how to broker meetings between the ladies and the men. I bring my Saudi side to the meetings, and as a female I sit with the other females, but at the same time I also guide the males to do what I need them to do.

“I can’t have one-on-one meetings with male clients. So I bring a male colleague to the table with me, and use that male as almost like a puppet.”

Ms Nasief says there are limitations to her role. For a start, she says, she has to work harder than the men – a challenge she thrives on.

But she acknowledges that Saudi women deserve better opportunities in the workplace.

“The government is building women-only work hubs to give these women employment, and part of my job involves working with people who are building these industries for women. But they’re currently talking about creating entrepreneurship cells in two specific fields – cosmetology and fashion,” she explains.

Ms Nasief isn’t the only female striving to break down the employment divide; this year Somayya Jabarti was appointed as the first female editor of a Saudi newspaper. In 2013 Saudi registered its first female trainee lawyer, Arwa Al Hujaili, and its first female police officer, Ayat Bakhreeba. Such pioneers are inspiring the next generation of Saudi females.

“Girls here have told me I inspire them to follow,” adds Ms Nasief. “When I did my first speaking engagement, I realised how impactful what I was doing was. I got questions like ‘I want to do my master’s degree, but I don’t want to leave my family’. I told them family is important, but just because you’re getting an education, it doesn’t mean you’re leaving your family cell.

“I took my journey to Saudi Arabia to fulfil my needs and reconnect with my roots. But now I realise that it’s about more than just me.”

Published on The National by Jessica Hill
 

Second Saudi Woman Secures Commercial Pilot Licence

Yasmeen Mohammad Al Maimani started to dream about flying when she was just seven years old. She was not particularly dreaming of being a captain, as she was not sure what she wanted to be — a hostess or a pilot.

But she still can recall how she loved flying at a young age.

Today, 23-year-old Yasmeen has fulfilled her dream. She was trained in flying academies in Jordan and the US and recently became the second Saudi women to receive a commercial pilot licence.

“After God, my family has the biggest role,” Yasmeen told Gulf News on the phone from Jeddah. “They stood next to me and supported me. I owe all this to my family.”

“My father took my hand and travelled with me to Jordan after I completed high school” in 2009 to join the flying academy, Yasmeen said.

She is happy to know that she was the only student in her class to join such an academy after, according to her estimates, between 30 per cent and 40 per cent of her classmates said they wanted to be pilots.

“I found myself alone. It was a big shock for me,” she said with a laugh.

“Why should I object? It is a normal thing ” asked Mohammad Yousuf Al Mainmani, Yasmeen’s father when asked about his reaction to his daughter’s plans to enter the aviation field.

“God willing, there will be no field closed in the face of Saudi women in the near future” he added to Gulf News.

Al Mainmani, a businessman and father of 12 children, expressed his “extreme happiness” at his daughter’s success in getting the commercial pilot licence.

In 2010, Yasmeen got a private pilot licence from Amman, and returned home in Jeddah, hoping to get a scholarship to continue her education. She said she preferred to be “independent” and not to seek financial help from her family.

“I tried everything but got nothing,” she said.

She worked for Rabigh Wings Aviation Academy for a year. And, because of the media attention on her, Yasmeen became known and got an offer from Aerosim Flight Academy in the US to be their ambassador to the Middle East.

She was also offered a scholarship to be trained in the US to obtain an auto commercial pilot licence. She travelled to Florida and continued her education.

After completion of her training in June 2013, she returned to Jeddah, where she joined Nexus Company for flight operation services.

Recently, she passed the practical and oral tests of the General Authority of Civil Aviation (GACA) in Saudi Arabia and got the commercial pilot licence to become the second Saudi woman to obtain what was looked at in the past as unthinkable.

Hanadi Zakaria Al Hindi was the first Saudi woman to become a commercial airline pilot. She received all her licences from abroad, but only got the Saudi one earlier this year.

Before 2014, women were not allowed to take the test to receive the licence. Women were simply not allowed to join aviation.

Still Yasmeen has not been given the green light to fly a commercial plane. She is waiting for an opening to apply for a job as she meets all the requirements. Meanwhile, she continues logging on flying hours.

The required flying hours differ from one company to another. They range from a few hundreds to a few thousand.

Meanwhile, she dreams of flying one of the planes of her current employer, Nexus. She hopes she can ask the CEO, Abdullah Al Sayed, CEO of Nexus Flight operations, to join her.

“He is my idol, and that is why I would like him to be on the plane I am flying,”

The number of women captains are still very low even in other Arab countries where women are allowed to obtain the licence and take the captain’s seat of a commercial plane.

Asked about the people’s general preference for a male captain in planes, she paused before responding. “Both men and women receive the same training. I don’t think you need big muscles to carry the plane on your head. The whole aviation field is about knowledge and information. It is about how much you know the system. It is all about knowledge.”

Published on Gulf News by Jumana AlTamimi

Raffles Design Institute Opens in Riyadh

Hala Halwani from Raffles KSA

Local women can now learn the latest skills in fashion designing in the Kingdom instead of going abroad leaving their loved ones behind, a Saudi woman entrepreneur said here.
“Future designers have the opportunity to discover, shape, attain, transfer and apply knowledge to become the best design creators in any of the following majors: Fashion design, Jewelry design, Visual communication (graphic design), Fashion marketing and merchandising,” Hala Halwani, director of Raffles Design Institute in Riyadh told Arab News on Monday.
This global educational experience has been brought to the Middle East starting in Riyadh, she said. “The Raffles Design Institute Riyadh is cooperating with the Singapore-based Raffles International Corporation (RIC) in an exciting joint venture,” Halwani said. 
“The RIC is internationally recognized for being the No 1 design specialized undergraduate and graduate school in the Asia-Pacific region since 1990 with over 20,000 graduates and current applicants,” she said adding that the new center in Riyadh will allow applicants to benefit from the specialized training without having to leave the country or their loved ones.
Raffles KSA is committed to promoting design as an industry and designers as creative artists who seek their passion and aspire to excellence, hence the Raffles Riyadh initiative, she said, stressing its motto ‘Evolve to Excel, Inspire to Empower.’
Empowerment of women, she said is a cause Raffles KSA takes seriously by providing female applicants the required knowledge and skills to become entrepreneurs and professional players in the design world through its diverse certificate options. 
There is a lot of flexibility and choice, she said, where applicants can choose between acquiring an associate bachelor degree between Riyadh and any Raffles international college, a high school diploma program, a diploma program, or a short diploma in the fundamentals of design.
“The full time study and incorporated international modules along with the inspiring and horizon broadening environment reflects the attained results of delivering a well-rounded student with unique exposure to the global design movement and culture,” Halwani said.
The Raffles Riyadh campus is impressively designed with large spacious classrooms infused with natural light; the walls are decorated with beautiful artwork and inspiring quotes from famous thinkers which make the stroll a pleasant journey to a new dimension of creativity and imagination.
“Starting Aug 31, with the beginning of its new semester, Raffles KSA promises the Riyadh community a new wave of talent manufacturing contributing to the overall refinement in design culture where all applicants will pour their talents into its vision of being the ‘Saudi Design Hub,” Halwani said.
She said that programs are also chalked out in coordination with the Technical Vocational Training Corporation (TVTC). She hoped that those who pass out from this institute would readily find jobs in the market since fashion designing is in vogue at the moment. She also pointed out that Harvey Nichols have already consented to take some of the successful candidates from the institute for employment in their outlets.

Published on Arab News by MD Rasooldeen

Arab Woman Awards KSA 2014 Winners Honored

This past February, The Arab Woman Awards KSA 2014 winners were honored at a gala reception at the Faisaliah Hotel here on Sunday evening. The ceremony was attended by over 300 women from the Kingdom.

This ceremony marks the first ever Arab Woman Awards to be held in the Kingdom, the awards have been held in three other GCC countries in the past five years including the United Arab Emirates, Kuwait and Qatar. 

The awards taking place in Saudi Arabia this year, aim to provide a culturally acceptable platform to recognize 16 inspirational winners from diverse fields including business, education, literature, entrepreneurship, humanitarian sciences, art and sashion.

“Since launching in the UAE in 2009, the Arab Woman Awards have recognized some of the region’s most outstanding women and provided a platform for further achievements. Accordingly, it was an honor to be asked to be the patron of the inaugural Arab Woman Awards in the Kingdom of Saudi Arabia. I am pleased to see these awards highlighting the endeavors of many hardworking Saudi women in their various fields, and also providing inspiration for the next generation of young Saudi women," said Princess Reema Bandar Al-Saud, patron of the Arab Woman Awards KSA 2014.

Princess Lolowah Al-Faisal was acknowledged as KSA’s education winner for the year 2014 while the Lifetime Achievement Award was presented to Samar Fatany. 

“I am honored to be a holder of such a prestigious award which is a positive initiative that recognizes the achievements of women who have contributed to the progress and development of our beloved country," said Fatany.

Established in 2009 by ITP Consumer the Arab Woman Awards are now held annually in the UAE, Qatar and Kuwait with the addition of Saudi Arabia this year. 

To date over 165 women have been recognized from sectors including business, education, art, medical, literature, sport, fashion, media and entrepreneurship.

The winners are selected following a three-month process by a private judging board. The KSA 214 board of judges was chaired by Princess Reema and included experts from different areas and representatives from across the Kingdom.

Full List of 2014 Winners

  • Businesswoman: Huda Al Ghoson
  • Education: HRH Princess Lolowah Al-Faisal Bin AbdulAziz
  • Art: Manal Al Dowayan
  • Entrepreneur: Lateefa Alwaalan
  • Literature: Dr. Badria Al Bisher
  • Sport: Sarah Attar
  • Fashion Designer: Amina Al Jassim
  • Young Designer: Maha Al Sudairi
  • Medical: Dr. Suad Bint Mohamed Bin Amer
  • Humanitarian: Suad Juffali
  • Media: Haifaa Almansour
  • Young Talent: Basmah Felemban
  • Woman in Government: Dr. Thoraya Obaid
  • Inspirational Arab Women of the year: Nashwa Taher
  • Lifetime Achievement: Samar Fatany
  • Special Recognition: HRH Sara Bint Faisal Al Saud

 

Published by Saudi Gazette

First Female Law Firm Opened in Jeddah

In what is being seen as a major boost for Saudi women seeking legal advice and help, Bayan Mahmoud Al-Zahran, the first Saudi woman lawyer who was issued license to practice law in the Kingdom, launched the first female law firm for the benefit of Saudi women on Wednesday.

Bayan Al-Zahran became the first Saudi woman lawyer when she appeared at the General Court in Jeddah for the first time in November last year to defend a client. She had been working for years as a legal consultant and had represented dozens of people in criminal and civil cases besides family disputes.

Al-Zahran told Arab News that the objective of her law firm is to fight for the rights of Saudi women and bring their problems before the court, since male lawyers in many cases couldn’t understand the problems and situations of a female plaintiff.

She said that she was planning to take up labor cases and business disputes but would also dedicate her time to women’s cases. 

“I believe women lawyers can contribute a lot to the legal system. This law firm will make a difference in the history of court cases and female disputes in the Kingdom. I am very hopeful and thank everyone who supported me in taking this historical step,” she said. 

Al-Zahran said in the past, Saudi women faced problems finding a female lawyer who could represent them in the court. However, with the establishment of her law firm, this problem will be solved, she said, adding that she was ready to take up cases of both genders.

She said she was looking forward to progress of women lawyers in Saudi Arabia in protecting the rights of women. “This is a very positive step toward the Saudi court and justices as right now, we are four female lawyers who got the license, but I am hopeful that in future, the number will increase,” she added. 

Al-Zahran’s father Sheikh Mahmoud Al-Zahran said this is the first step toward the protection of the women’s rights in the Kingdom. “We are very proud of our daughter who stands firm for protection of women’s rights. This will help all women who couldn’t go and speak to male lawyers about their problems,” he said. 

The launch was attended by Mazen Batterjee, vice president of Jeddah Chamber of Commerce, Zuhair Nawab, president of the Saudi Geological Survey (SGS), Dr. Hussain Al Shareef , supervisor general of National Human Rights Organization, Makkah, Dr. Suhail Sawan, executive director of national committee for prisoners, Dr. Inam Ribwai, director of children surgery at King Fahad hospital and former director of family protection organization, and a number of businessmen and society ladies, doctors, lawyers, academics and jurists.

Mazen Batterjee, while congratulating Bayan and all the female lawyers, however, emphasized on Shariah law in every aspect of life and in law practice in Saudi courts.

He said female lawyers should follow the restrictions of the court for hijab since Islam while giving rights to women, also had ethics in place for women while presenting themselves before a judge.

He hoped this first step toward a women’s law firm will be successful and follow all the rules and regulations of court and religion.

Dr. Suhail Sawan said that Al-Zahran was working for years as legal consultant and studying cases of prisons which gave her excellent exposure. This law firm is a milestone in that there are situations which can only be understood and represented by a female lawyer, he said.

Published on Arab News by Fouzia Khan

First Saudi Woman Appointed To A Top OIC Post

Maha Akeel signing a copy of her book

Maha Akeel, a Saudi journalist who was the managing editor of OIC journal, has been appointed the Director of Information and Public Relations at the Organization of the Islamic Cooperation (OIC).

The appointment of a woman as a Director of a department is a shot-in-the-arm for women empowerment.

Speaking to Saudi Gazette she said that her new duties are to keep the public informed about OIC and its activities, to promote objective and strategies of the organization and to shed light on different initiatives of OIC.

She described the new position as “challenging” and a “big step” for women in the Islamic states and Saudi women in particular. “I have big responsibilities, however, with the support of the secretary-general and the help of my colleagues I will be able to do my duty.”

The challenge, she said, are less intense as she has been familiar with the work in the OIC having worked in the media department for seven years. “Women have been working in the OIC since 2006 when I first joined. We are now about 7 in number, and the secretary-general is looking forward to employ more women.”

The newly appointed OIC secretary-general is Iyad Madani, who is the former Saudi minister of information. 

Maha denied that her new position has been given to her based on her nationality. She added, “I had to fight for this!” 

Maha, during the OIC celebration of International Women’s Day recently, had remarked: “Unfortunately, there is a general misconception about the status of women in Islam and her rights and duties, not only by non-Muslims but also by Muslims themselves.

“And the media plays a critical role in propagating these ideas and stereotypical images of Muslim women abroad, and some of the misunderstandings of Islam, policies and inherited traditions in our societies confirm these images, whereas Islam has preserved the rights of women and raised her status.”

Published on Saudi Gazette by Fatima Muhammad

Saudi Gazette Appoints Kingdom’s First Female Newspaper Editor

The Saudi Gazette newspaper has appointed the country’s first female editor-in-chief, in what has been called a “historic” move in the conservative kingdom.

Somayya Jabarti takes the reins of the English-language newspaper from Khaled Almaeena, who becomes editor-at-large.

Jabarti, previously deputy editor, becomes the first female editor of a national newspaper in Saudi Arabia, although other women have headed magazines in the kingdom.

“There’s a crack that has been made in the glass ceiling. And I’m hoping it will be made into a door,” Jabarti told Al Arabiya News.

“This is a first for a Saudi daily… A mold has been broken where editors-in-chief of Saudi daily newspapers are concerned.”

Jabarti spoke of the responsibility she feels in the new position, given that her success may have a bearing on other women’s careers.

“Being the first Saudi woman [newspaper editor] is going to be double the responsibility... One’s actions will reflect upon my fellow Saudi women,” she said.

“The success will not be complete unless I see my peers who are also Saudi women in the media, take other roles where they are decision makers.”

Before joining the Saudi Gazette in March 2011, Jabarti worked at rival newspaper Arab News, where over nine years she rose in the ranks to deputy editor.

Jabarti’s new role begins imminently, with her name appearing on the newspaper masthead from tomorrow.

The editor says she has not encountered any sexism or racism at Saudi Gazette, which has about 20 reporters, of which just three are men.

“The majority of our reporters are women – not because we are biased and choosing women over men. There are more women who are interested in being journalists, and who are journalists.”

However, most of the newspaper’s staff are content editors, and these are predominately men, she added. She said Saudi visa restrictions and working hours were challenges to employing more women.

The former editor-in-chief Almaeena confirmed the change at the newspaper, calling Jabarti’s appointment a “historic” move.

“She’s the first editor-in-chief of a Saudi paper - English or Arabic-language,” he said. “In Saudi Arabia it’s a major achievement.”

Almaeena, writing of his move here, said he has long held a goal of seeing a “Saudi woman enter the male-dominated bastion of editors-in-chief.”

But he told Al Arabiya News that Jabarti’s gender was not a factor in the appointment. “She deserves it,” he said. “For me, gender doesn’t matter.”

Almaeena said that the newspaper’s “greatest competitor” is Twitter, something that will prove a “major challenge” for the new editor.

Almaeena took the editorship of Saudi Gazette in April 2012, having twice been editor of Arab News, from 1982 to 1993 and from 1998 to 2011.

“An editor-in-chief is like a platoon commander,” he wrote. “He has to make hasty decisions, shoot from the hip and improvise without turning to press rules and regulations. And I enjoy doing that as exhibited by front-paging the story of the two Saudi women athletes to the Olympics when many others were hesitant to do so. For our team, red lines often were very thin and blurred.”

Published on Alarabiya English by Ben Flanegan

Women and Economic Decision-Making - Davos 2013

Originally posted on May 12, 2013 
Some of the most influential women in world discussed how to close gender-gaps at the highest levels of economic decision-making at the 2013 World Economic Forum.

The panelists include:

  • Lubna AlolayanDeputy Chairperson and Chief Executive Officer, Olayan Financing Company
  • Drew Gilpin Faust, President, Harvard University
  • Christine Lagarde, Managing Director, International Monetary Fund (IMF); World Economic Forum Foundation Board Member
  • Viviane Reding, Vice-President and Commissioner, Justice, Fundamental Rights and Citizenship, European Commission
  • Sheryl Sandberg, Chief Operating Officer and Member of the Board, Facebook; Young Global Leader Alumnus
  • Kevin Kelly, Chief Executive Officer, Heidrick & Struggles

Key points for Saudi women: 

  • It makes economic sense to improve the situation of women in regards to health, education, and employment. 
  • Why applying a quota for employing women is sometimes necessary. 
  • The importance of female role-models and examples of female leadership.
  • The role of major Arab companies in aiding women to develop their professional skills. They need to hire, promote, and mentor women until they have the right qualifications. 
  • There needs to be a focus from the CEO's, boards, and chairmen of companies to put pressure on the middle-management and be responsible for ensuring that women are being hired and promoted.  
  • Women should not be distracted by things that will take away from what they are trying to accomplish.