>> ASIAONE / NEWS / LATEST NEWS / ASIA / STORY
Saudi woman minister needs permission to be on TV
Mon, Jun 08, 2009
Reuters

RIYADH - Saudi Arabia's first woman cabinet minister cannot appear on television without permission, a newspaper quoted her as saying on Monday.

Noura al-Faiz's appointment in February as deputy minister for women's education was hailed as a big step for the integration of women in conservative Saudi Arabia where a puritanical form of Islam bans women from driving, voting and mixing with unrelated men.

"I don't take my veil off and I will not appear on television unless it is allowed for us to do so," Faiz told the daily Shamss, which published a picture of the deputy minister wearing a headscarf with her face showing.

Saudi state television has hired Saudi women as presenters in recent years as part of a reform drive launched after the Sept. 11 attacks in U.S. cities which focused international attention on radicalism in the world's biggest oil exporter.

Faiz also dismissed calls for girls to be allowed to do sport at school, which Saudi Arabia's powerful religious establishment has prevented. "It's way too early," the paper reported her as saying.

Her ministry was not immediately available for comment.

(Reporting by Souhail Karam)


 
 
STORY INDEX
 
  Third acid attack on busy Hong Kong shopping street
   
 
  N.Korea tests, leadership succession dangerous mix
   
 
  Private security booms in violent Pakistan
   
 
  Taiwan man to pay for revealing bald truth
   
 
  New Australia ministers sworn in after reshuffle
   
 
  Japan pearls in peril amid recession, competition
   
 
  Thai army chief visits south after mosque attack
   
 
  China airs fears on US debt, dollar
   
 
  S.Korean nuclear envoy says he will visit China
   
 
  Thai woman returns from US with H1N1 virus
   
We welcome contributions, comments and tips.
a1admin@sph.com.sg