Saudi women can work as housemaids

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Ghazi Al Ghosaibi, Saudi Arabia’s Labour Minister, decried the influence on guardians on Saudi Arabian society during a meeting with the Human Rights Commission, saying they hindered society’s progress. His comments came as a response over a controversy sparked by the Ministry of Social Affairs, which is considering hiring Saudi women as housemaids. The minister went on to criticize the elements in society who reject the notion of women choosing that profession.

“I see that any job, whatever it may be, is an agreement between an employer and the employee. It is a matter of accepting and refusing. If there is a woman whose circumstances force her to work in a kitchen for a few hours and she accepts the payment, then I cannot come and say, ‘How could Saudi women take such jobs?’ Our mothers and grandmothers used to do such jobs. And they still do in the Bedouin culture,” he said.

“The ministry or any other concerned authority has no business if a woman is satisfied with her payment. And I have no right to say that a Saudi woman should not be dubbed a ‘housemaid’,” Al Gosaibi said. He

I am happy to see this position accepted by the Saudi Ministry of Labour. In fact this might help stop people from associating housemaid with “cheap” slaves and people might begin to respect and appreciate these positions. If you condemn this, then you would have to condemn the other housemaids from South Asia as well, namely Sri Lanka, which Saudi Arabia has more than 600,000 of.