SAUDI ARABIA: Saudi female medical scientist Dr. Hayat bint Sulaiman Sindi raises hopes for women in politics
Record ID:
189169
SAUDI ARABIA: Saudi female medical scientist Dr. Hayat bint Sulaiman Sindi raises hopes for women in politics
- Title: SAUDI ARABIA: Saudi female medical scientist Dr. Hayat bint Sulaiman Sindi raises hopes for women in politics
- Date: 15th April 2013
- Summary: JEDDAH, SAUDI ARABIA (RECENT) (REUTERS) VARIOUS OF DR.HAYAT SINDI, ONE OF THE FIRST FEMALE MEMBERS OF SAUDI ARABIA'S SHURA COUNCIL, SPEAKING TO WOMEN AT AN ART EXHIBITION IN JEDDAH VARIOUS OF PEOPLE TAKING PICTURES WITH DR.HAYAT SINDI (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) DR.HAYAT SINDI, MEDICAL SCIENTIST AND ONE OF THE FIRST FEMALE MEMBERS OF SAUDI ARABIA'S SHURA COUNCIL, SAYING: "The absence of women in the past from the Shura Council made people unaware of a particular viewpoint (of women) because she (the woman) lives the problems or through certain situations that no-one else can understand. The King's decision (to appoint women to the Shura Council) is the best thing that happened to Saudi women since education, by giving women a position and a mandate and showing a truer picture of the natural society in which both men and women have a voice." VARIOUS OF HAYAT SINDI BEING INTERVIEWED BY REPORTERS AT ART EXHIBITION (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) DR.HAYAT SINDI, MEDICAL SCIENTIST AND ONE OF THE FIRST FEMALE MEMBERS OF SAUDI ARABIA'S SHURA COUNCIL, SAYING: "Many of my male colleagues are very happy with our presence in the Shura Council because we really do look at things in a different way and put forward another point of view." VARIOUS OF DR.SINDI PRAYING AT HER OFFICE (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) DR.HAYAT SINDI, MEDICAL SCIENTIST AND ONE OF THE FIRST FEMALE MEMBERS OF SAUDI ARABIA'S SHURA COUNCIL, SAYING: "Certainly our presence in the Shura Council will have a great impact in favour of women in various fields, but, in relation to women driving cars, this is still a big discussion. When this will be achieved depends on society and on having a suitable environment." VARIOUS OF DR.SINDI SPEAKING WITH A COLLEAGUE (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) DR.HAYAT SINDI, MEDICAL SCIENTIST AND ONE OF THE FIRST FEMALE MEMBERS OF SAUDI ARABIA'S SHURA COUNCIL, SAYING: "The problems of Saudi women are not individual, they are a social issue on how Saudi women live in society, her son, her husband, neighbour, her manager, her school, all (living) in a progressive and developed society . So I promise her (the Saudi woman) that things always get better and, like in any country in the world, we need a mix of all segments of society in order to move forward for the better." VARIOUS OF SINDI AND COLLEAGUE SPEAKING (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) DR.HAYAT SINDI, MEDICAL SCIENTIST AND ONE OF THE FIRST FEMALE MEMBERS OF SAUDI ARABIA'S SHURA COUNCIL, SAYING: "I think I was chosen because of my role in society. All the research I have done and the sciences that I studied and still study and teach, is about how we can use science to serve society. My innovations were about how I could help the needy and the deprived or to diagnose incurable diseases." DR.SINDI READING AT HER OFFICE (SOUNDBITE) (Arabic) DR.HAYAT SINDI, MEDICAL SCIENTIST AND ONE OF THE FIRST FEMALE MEMBERS OF SAUDI ARABIA'S SHURA COUNCIL, SAYING: "My appearances in the external media also made them consider me because I was associated with both religion and science and so I was looked at as a role model for school boys and girls on how dreams can become a reality."
- Embargoed: 30th April 2013 13:00
- Keywords:
- Location: Saudi Arabia
- Country: Saudi Arabia
- Topics: General
- Reuters ID: LVA8UXWTVZUA80NQI4QNAFWH3QU5
- Story Text: TV AND WEB RESTRICTIONS~**NONE**
Saudi Arabian medical scientist Dr. Hayat bint Sulaiman Sindi made history in Saudi Arabia as one of the first females to be appointed to the country's Shura council, the consultative assembly which advises the government on new legislation. Sindi hopes she will be a role model for young Saudi men and women, helping them to realise their dreams.
==RESENDING WITH FULL SCRIPT==
SHOWS: RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA (FILE - SEPTEMBER 25, 2011) (REUTERS - ACCESS ALL )
1.KING OF SAUDI ARABIA, ABDULLAH BIN ABDULAZIZ, ENTERING SHURA COUNCIL (THE CONSULTATIVE ASSEMBLY OF SAUDI ARABIA) AND GREETING SHURA MEMBERS
2. SHURA MEMBERS SEATED LISTENING TO KING SPEAK
3. (SOUNDBITE)(Arabic) SAUDI KING ABDULLAH BIN ABDULAZIZ SPEAKING TO SHURA COUNCIL MEMBERS, SAYING:
"First: (decision): Women will participate as members of the Shura Council from its next session in accordance with Shariah rules (on gender mixing in the workplace)."
4. SHURA MEMBERS CLAPPING/STANDING FOR THE KING
JEDDAH, SAUDI ARABIA (RECENT) (REUTERS - ACCESS ALL )
5. VARIOUS OF DR.HAYAT SINDI, ONE OF THE FIRST FEMALE MEMBERS OF SAUDI ARABIA'S SHURA COUNCIL, SPEAKING TO WOMEN AT AN ART EXHIBITION IN JEDDAH
6. VARIOUS OF PEOPLE TAKING PICTURES WITH DR.HAYAT SINDI
7. (SOUNDBITE)(Arabic) DR.HAYAT SINDI, MEDICAL SCIENTIST AND ONE OF THE FIRST FEMALE MEMBERS OF SAUDI ARABIA'S SHURA COUNCIL, SAYING:
"The absence of women in the past from the Shura Council made people unaware of a particular viewpoint (of women) because she (the woman) lives the problems or through certain situations that no-one else can understand. The king's decision (to appoint women to the Shura Council) is the best thing that happened to Saudi women since education, by giving women a position and a mandate and showing a truer picture of the natural society in which both men and women have a voice."
8. VARIOUS OF HAYAT SINDI BEING INTERVIEWED BY REPORTERS AT ART EXHIBITION
9. (SOUNDBITE)(Arabic) DR.HAYAT SINDI, MEDICAL SCIENTIST AND ONE OF THE FIRST FEMALE MEMBERS OF SAUDI ARABIA'S SHURA COUNCIL, SAYING:
"Many of my male colleagues are very happy with our presence in the Shura Council because we really do look at things in a different way and put forward another point of view."
10. VARIOUS OF DR.SINDI PRAYING AT HER OFFICE
11. (SOUNDBITE)(Arabic) DR.HAYAT SINDI, MEDICAL SCIENTIST AND ONE OF THE FIRST FEMALE MEMBERS OF SAUDI ARABIA'S SHURA COUNCIL, SAYING:
"Certainly our presence in the Shura Council will have a great impact in favour of women in various fields, but, in relation to women driving cars, this is still a big discussion. When this will be achieved depends on society and on having a suitable environment."
12. VARIOUS OF DR.SINDI SPEAKING WITH A COLLEAGUE
13. (SOUNDBITE)(Arabic) DR.HAYAT SINDI, MEDICAL SCIENTIST AND ONE OF THE FIRST FEMALE MEMBERS OF SAUDI ARABIA'S SHURA COUNCIL, SAYING:
"The problems of Saudi women are not individual, they are a social issue on how Saudi women live in society, her son, her husband, neighbour, her manager, her school, all (living) in a progressive and developed society . So I promise her (the Saudi woman) that things always get better and, like in any country in the world, we need a mix of all segments of society in order to move forward for the better."
14. VARIOUS OF SINDI AND COLLEAGUE SPEAKING
15. (SOUNDBITE)(Arabic) DR.HAYAT SINDI, MEDICAL SCIENTIST AND ONE OF THE FIRST FEMALE MEMBERS OF SAUDI ARABIA'S SHURA COUNCIL, SAYING:
"I think I was chosen because of my role in society. All the research I have done and the sciences that I studied and still study and teach, is about how we can use science to serve society. My innovations were about how I could help the needy and the deprived or to diagnose incurable diseases."
16 .DR.SINDI READING AT HER OFFICE
17 .(SOUNDBITE)(Arabic) DR.HAYAT SINDI, MEDICAL SCIENTIST AND ONE OF THE FIRST FEMALE MEMBERS OF SAUDI ARABIA'S SHURA COUNCIL, SAYING:
"My appearances in the external media also made them consider me because I was associated with both religion and science and so I was looked at as a role model for school boys and girls on how dreams can become a reality."
RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA (FILE - MARCH 04, 2013) (REUTERS - ACCESS ALL )
18. UNITED STATES SECRETARY OF STATE JOHN KERRY AND SAUDI FOREIGN MINISTER SAUDI AL FAISAL ENTERING NEWS CONFERENCE ROOM AT THE SAUDI FOREIGN MINISTRY IN RIYADH
19. (SOUNDBITE)(English) JOHN KERRY, UNITED STATES SECRETARY OF STATE, SPEAKING TO REPORTERS AT NEWS CONFERENCE IN RIYADH, SAYING:
"I want to recognize the Saudi government for appointing 30 women to the Shura council and for promoting greater economic opportunity for women. Again, we talked about the number of women entering the work force and the transition that is taking place in the Kingdom. We encourage further inclusive reforms to insure that all citizens of the kingdom ultimately enjoy their basic rights and their freedoms."
20. VARIOUS OF SAUDI FEMALE REPORTER WRITING NOTES AT PRESS CONFERENCE.
STORY:
With a PhD in biotechnology from Britain's Cambridge University and a recurring presence on many of the world's most influential females lists, medical scientist Hayat Sindi is no stranger to breaking away from the typical Saudi female mould.
In February Sindi broke down yet another of Saudi Arabia's gender barriers when she became one of the first women to be sworn into the Shura Council in the ultra-conservative kingdom.
Saudi Arabia's King Abdullah first announced that women would join the unelected 150-member body, which functions like a parliament but without formal powers, in 2011.
But women were only formally appointed in January this year after the king formally decreed that women should always hold at least 20 percent of the seats.
"The absence of women in the past from the Shura Council made people unaware of a particular viewpoint (of women) because she (the woman) lives the problems or through certain situations that no-one else can understand. The king's decision (to appoint women to the Shura Council) is the best thing that happened to Saudi women since education by giving women a position and a mandate and by showing a truer picture of the natural society in which both men and women have a voice," said 46-year old Hayat Sindi, one of the first women to be made a member of the Shura Council.
In his 2011 decree, King Abdullah also said women would be able to vote and stand for office in the municipal polls.
The decision to appoint women to the Shura Council prompted a protest by dozens of conservative clerics outside the royal court in January, however Sindi spoke positively about her experience of men's reaction to her appointment.
"Many of my male colleagues are very happy with our presence in the Shura Council because we really do look at things in a different way and put forward another point of view," Sindi explained.
The Shura Council, composed mostly of academics, clerics, businessmen and former civil servants, has had 12 women "advisers" since 2006 and some saw the new legal requirement for female council members as a testament to the king's push for modest social change in the religious Gulf state.
Women in the kingdom cannot travel, work or open a bank account without the permission of a male relative, known as their "guardian", and are barred from driving but Sindi feels hopeful about the development of women's place in Saudi society.
"Certainly our presence in the Shura Council will have a great impact in favour of women in various fields, but, in relation to women driving cars, this is still a big discussion. When this will be achieved depends on society and on having a suitable environment," said Sindi before going on to "promise Saudi women that things always get better...like in any country in the world, we need a mix of all segments of society in order to move forward for the better."
A native of Mecca, one of Islam's holiest cities, Sindi graduated with a degree in pharmacology from British university, King's College London in 1995 before completing her doctorate in biotechnology from Cambridge University in 2001.
Sindi divides her times between being a visiting scholar at Harvard University in the United States, and working as a medical researcher and inventor in Saudi Arabia.
"I think I was chosen because of my role in society. All the research I have done and the sciences that I studied and still study and teach, is about how we can use science to serve society. My innovations were about how I could help the needy and the deprived or to diagnose incurable diseases," she said.
While at Cambridge Sindi invented the Magnetic Acoustic Resonator Sensor (MARS), a machine that combines the effects of light and ultra-sound to accurately choose suitable medications to deal with different cancers. She is often considered a role model for aspirational Arab women and has made it on to Arabian Business's lists for the World's Most Influential Arabs in 2012 and named one of Newsweek's "150 Women Who Shake the World" in the same year.
"My appearances in the external media also made them consider me because I was associated with both religion and science and so I was looked at as a role model for school boys and girls on how dreams can become a reality," added Sindi.
Liberals in the Gulf Arab state say Abdullah, who became king in 2005 after effectively ruling as crown prince for a decade before that, has pushed for modest social change, calling for women to have more opportunities to work.
At a press conference in Riyadh last month U.S Secretary of State, John Kerry, applauded the Saudi government's reforms at promoting "greater economic opportunity for women", adding that, "we encourage further inclusive reforms to insure that all citizens of the kingdom ultimately enjoy their basic rights and their freedoms."
The Shura Council, which vets legislation and makes recommendations to the government, will now remodel parts of its chamber to ensure strict gender segregation between its members. - Copyright Holder: REUTERS
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