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I just got back from my second visit to The Kingdom of Saudi Arabia – a two-day business trip to help a Riyadh-based consultancy with its communications initiatives. Change Takes Time...
Women in the West take such things for granted, just as we take for granted the fact that we can vote, drive, and demand equality at home and in the workplace. But we sometimes forget that we haven’t always had these rights; it’s been a long and bumpy road to get to where we are now, and the journey certainly isn’t over. ...And It's In The Making
It’s not my place to judge others. Neither is it to suggest that one way is better than another. We should all have the right as individuals, as well as nations, to follow our chosen paths.
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written by mark barker,
May 12, 2009
Anyone in conflict with this story should read:
http://www.economist.com/world/mideast-africa/displaystory.cfm?story_id=11090113 and http://www.bbc.co.uk/radio4/womanshour/03/2007_48_tue.shtml What about the Mutawain locking in the girls in a school whilst a fire was raging in the interests of decency; many died and for what? What is not discussed is the immense amount of corruption and how, in addition to man's dominion over women the 13,000-strong royal family control the way things are run. As one Emirati businessman told me: 'it's impossible to do business in the kingdom without knowing a prince'. Any confusion with Islam and state-sponsored repression is a typical misunderstanding in this part of the world, or maybe I should replace misunderstanding with prejudice... report abuse
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Makes for interesting reading...http://uaecommunity.blogspot.c...0966861900