Saudi women workforce continue inspiring each other amid coronavirus lockdown - GulfToday

Saudi women workforce continue inspiring each other amid coronavirus lockdown

saudi women1

Saudi Rodina Maamoun sells jewellery at a retail store in Riyadh's Hayat mall.

Like thousands of Saudi women, Rouaa al-Mousa entered the workforce.

 

Mousa graduated in the midst of changes in the kingdom that have seen women flood the labour market.

 

She got a job working the evening shift as a receptionist at a government institution in Riyadh.

 

And although the coronavirus has threatened a global recession and put Mousa in lockdown for now, she is confident the long-term trend of getting women into the workforce is here to stay.

 

"I wanted to do my best during my studies so that I could get a job in academia afterwards, because that was the best option available for us. But big changes happened during the past four years," she told.

 

"Almost all of my friends are now working, and when one of them doesn't get a job, it seems strange."

 

saudi women2 Saudi women sell jewellery at a retail store in Riyadh's Hayat mall.

 

 'The crisis will pass'

 

Fatima al-Dakhil got her big break as a sales manager at a French company in the Saudi city of Khobar after months of job hunting, but just weeks later Saudi Arabia took strict measures to combat coronavirus.

 

The kingdom has so far recorded the highest number of cases in the Gulf with more than 17,000 infections and 139 deaths.

 

Despite being frustrated by the lockdown, which has forced her and hundreds of thousands of others to abandon their offices and work from home, Dakhil is

confident that women across the country will continue to pursue careers.

 

"All my girlfriends have joined the labour market," the 25-year-old told AFP, solemnly expressing hope the virus "crisis will pass".

 

Saudi women have now penetrated professional spheres at all levels -- they are bankers, business owners, heads of financial institutions, border crossing officers, civil defence members, food cart vendors and shoe sellers.

 

Male employees report that their workplaces have changed dramatically -- among the many small revolutions are women's toilets which have been introduced for the first time in some places.

 


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Saudi saleswoman Sarah Al-Dosari, 23, works at a clothing store run by three women at the Panorama Mall in the centre of Riyadh.

 

The number of working women in Saudi Arabia reached 1.03 million in the third quarter of 2019, 35 percent of the total workforce, compared to 816,000 in 2015, according to official figures.

 

Rodina Maamoun has been tasked by the owner of five stores selling women's accessories with introducing women onto a formerly all-male staff.

 

"Customers, especially women, feel more comfortable with female assistants -- sales and profits have risen," said the Saudi who employed 19 young women, almost entirely replacing the men.

 

 

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