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If this year’s been one thing, it has been empowering – especially for the women in Saudi Arabia.
Huge reforms have taken place and while a lot more are to come, it’s time to take a look back at just some of the incredible reforms that took place for the women in Saudi Arabia this year.
It’s hard to have missed this one.
In September, King Salman bin Abdulaziz decided that women will now be allowed to drive, a decision that broke decades of tradition and took all of the internet by storm.
Driving licenses will be issued from June next year and the excitement is just too real – driving schools are opening, women traffic police are getting hired, and some women are already learning to drive.
Welcome to the driver’s seat. #SaudiWomenMove #SaudiWomenCanDrive pic.twitter.com/oksRbFvLWa
— Ford Middle East (@FordMiddleEast) September 27, 2017
The first all-women city council is going to be established very soon in Madina and it is going to be all-things empowering.
Basically, it is going to have everything needed to support and advice women who are working or looking to work.
More of these please!
Women in Saudi Arabia will soon be able to serve the police force. As of now, they will be allowed tojoin the traffic department but we know this is just the beginning.
Three major cities in Saudi Arabia (Jeddah, Dammam and Riyadh) officially opened their doors to women and it has been incredible.
In fact, Riyadh’s King Fahad stadium welcomed crowds of Saudi families in high spirits as they waved thousands of flags in solidarity with this reform.
It was announced earlier this year that girls in public schools will now be allowed to participate in physical education. (Private schools were already allowed to do so.)
46 women have already been trained to become PE supervisorsspread out in girls’ schools all over the country by the beginning of the academic year.
The first all-women basketball tournament of Saudi Arabia was held at Al-Jowhara Stadium in Jeddah earlier this year and everyone was just so exciting.
What more, the tournament was organised to support their breast cancer awareness campaign. Double win.
#Jeddah hosts first all-#women #basketball tournament — https://t.co/putWNikz5l #SaudiArabia #EmpowerWomen @JeddahUnited @SaudiMOH @gsaksa #BreastCancerAwareness pic.twitter.com/FK7I1FN06o
— Saudi Gazette (@Saudi_Gazette) November 13, 2017
In an effort to increase the number of Saudi women in the workforce, the Kingdom will train women for positions as air traffic controllers.
This is part of Vision 2030 to increase women in the overall workforce from 23% to 28%.
First the streets, now the skies – there is going to be no stopping for women in the kingdom.
Saudia Airlines announced its plans to offer pilot-training scholarships for women in the kingdom.
Fatima Baeshen was appointed as the first spokeswoman for Saudi’s embassy in Washington DC.
She was previously a director of the Think Arabia Foundation.
Proud to serve the @SaudiEmbassyUSA as the spokeswoman. I’m grateful for the opportunity, the support, and well wishes #KSA
— Fatimah S Baeshen (@FatimahSBaeshen) September 26, 2017
Mishaal Ashemimry because Saudi’s first woman to join NASAthis year.
She was congratulated by the US Central Command and the Saudi Ministry of Culture & Information for becoming such an inspiration to women (and men!) everywhere.
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