Saudi government creates thousands of new jobs for women
Council of Ministers to create 12,600 jobs in educational administration for unemployed graduates of teachers’ colleges.
May 25, 2010 9:49 by Katherine Azmeh
The Cabinet decision is good news for more than 60,000 Saudi women who remain jobless after graduating 15 years ago.
The weekly Cabinet meeting, chaired by Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah, has set up a ministerial committee to finalize procedures to appoint graduates of these institutes, which were closed several years ago.
Culture and Information Minister Abdul Aziz Khoja said 12,600 graduates of those institutes would be given fourth grade administrative jobs at girls schools within three years, beginning academic year 2011-12. Every year 4,200 graduates will be employed under the plan.
Priority will be given to candidates who have waited the longest and secured the highest marks. They will be given jobs near their homes.
The secondary women teachers’ institutes were established in 1976 to train teachers to work in primary schools. There were 81 such institutes in 1982 with 7,637 students.
According to a statement issued by former Education Minister Abdullah Al-Obaid, about 60,000 institute graduates are jobless as university graduates are preferred over them because of their higher qualification.
Suhaila Hammad, member of the National Society for Human Rights, welcomed the government decision and hoped it would ease the plight of thousands of women. “It is the duty of the government to create jobs for graduates of these institutes as well as those of intermediate colleges,” she told Arab News.
Hammad said the government should allow these graduates to improve their skills to help them land better jobs. She claimed there were more than 300,000 unemployed women graduates in the Kingdom.
She wants the Human Resource Development Fund to provide these graduates with necessary training to improve their chances of employment in various fields.
Deputy Labor Minister Mufrej Al-Haqabani told a seminar in Abha recently that 65 percent of qualified Saudi women are unemployed. Around 95 percent of working Saudi women are in the public sector, the bulk of them in education.
More on GCC
-
Qatar Holding, Italy Fund Eying Versace – Paper
-
Saudi government websites targeted
-
NCoV – First report of patient-to-nurse spread
-
Saudi regulations target stock market speculators
-
Dubai’s Arqaam Capital Eyes South Africa, Saudi Expansion
-
U.S. Targets Two UAE Firms For Dealing With Blacklisted Iran Banks
-
Airbus officially picked by Kuwait Airways
-
GMR reveals top 50 Mena Corporate Brands
-
Kuwait Airways to sign $3 billion-plus Airbus deal
-
Abu Dhabi Tourism Company Loss Widens
-
Emirates Airline reaps expansion profits
-
Saudi Arabia has 13 cases of SARS-like Coronavirus – WHO
-
UAE Central Bank Shuts Two Money Exchange Firms For Violations
-
Emal plans further expansion
-
Dubai looking at alternatives to repay debt
-
Two more die in Saudi Arabia from SARS-like virus – WHO
-
Alwaleed’s Kingdom on the prowl
-
Qatar Airways now looks to Airbus
-
World’s Longest-Range Passenger Jet
-
Abu Dhabi says financial zone will bridge a gap
Lately on Kipp
-
Qatar Holding, Italy Fund Eying Versace – Paper
-
Tesco Clothing Brand Plans International Expansion
-
Here’s to Yahoo being ‘cool’ again
-
Kindi enters into strategic partnership with MadVillage
-
First UTM solution to deliver combined gateway, endpoint and cloud web protection
-
Saudi government websites targeted
1 Comment


































Sir ,
Iam MBA fresher in HR and also done INDUSTRIAL SAFETY MANAGEMENT N OSHA,but still not getting job coz i dont have experience.Sir each and every one needs experience and it can only be gained after working.sir if possible then help me.
with regards
Rubina