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Saudi officials: More professions should be open to women

December 19, 2016 at 3:34 pm

A senior Saudi cleric and a health ministry official said women should be allowed to work as paramedics and opticians, Saudi newspapers reported today, part of a push to relax strict labour codes in the ultra-conservative kingdom.

The government announced an economic reform plan in June that aims to increase the number of women as a proportion of the workforce to 28 per cent from 23 per cent by 2020 and to quadruple the number of women in senior civil service roles to five per cent.

Regulations in the country bar women from certain professions, while rules on gender mixing in shops and businesses further limit job opportunities.

“It’s fine [for a woman] to work as a paramedic, provided she’s decent and in the lawful attire,” a senior member of the state-appointed body of clerics, the Ulama, Sheikh Abdullah Sl-Manea told the Okaz daily.

Women are already allowed to work as doctors and have volunteered as medics in Makkah during the Hajj pilgrimage for the past few years, with similar requirements for modest dress.

Mohammad Bajbair, a senior health official in the Red Sea commercial hub of Jeddah, told the Saudi Gazette that women could work in opticians’ shops as long as they do not mix with men.

“If a complaint is received by the health affairs department about the mixed environment then the shop might be closed down,” said Bajbair.