A heavy metal door guards the entrance to the women's section of the Nardeen lighting company in Riyadh. To gain admittance, you press the bell and wait. In my case it is a long wait because the arrival of a male visitor brings production to a halt inside the factory while the entire workforce of 30 women shroud their faces in black.
Eventually I am allowed in, only to hear a scream from one woman in the distance who is still wrestling to pull her abaya over an orange dress. Unsure of the protocol, I turn my back to await the all-clear.
Working from 7am to 3pm, with a lunch break and a prayer break, the women assemble 2,800 fluorescent light fittings every day. It's fiddly work, but even with the woollen gloves they wear to protect their skin, they slip the wires and other bits and pieces into position at lightning speed. Once an hour a loud bell rings, signalling that they must cover themselves again because a man is coming to collect their finished work.
The women's section at the Nardeen factory, which opened last April, is a sign of changing times in Saudi Arabia. It is one of half a dozen projects sponsored by a charity to provide needy women with jobs in a man-free environment.
The women are paid the same rates as men and earn 2,000 riyals ($550) a month, plus bonuses if they exceed the daily production quota - not a lot, considering the country's oil wealth, but comparable with what some Saudi teachers earn.....
Behind the veil
+ Reply to Thread
Results 1 to 2 of 2
Thread: Behind the veil in Saudi Arabia
-
4th March 2006 02:01 #1
Super Moderator
- Join Date
- Jan 2006
- Posts
- 289,737
-
4th March 2006 03:39 #2
Former Member
- Join Date
- Jan 2006
- Posts
- 1,300
I read two books ages ago (no not the only two i've read
) that this title reminded me of.

and







LinkBack URL
About LinkBacks
Reply With Quote
Bangladesh
Ecuador
Morocco
Nepal
Nicaragua
Puerto Rico
Russia
Scotland
South Africa
Ukraine
Virtual Countries