Monday, August 3, 2009 - 5:32 PM

A new government scheme has recruited a group
of Saudi women to work locally as housemaids for the first time in the country's
history. The thirty women, aged 20 to 45, passed a stringent application process
and underwent intensive training before they were given contracts in homes across
Jeddah.
The Ministry of Labor only permitted Saudi women to find jobs in domestic services
two years ago. Work in the sector has been long stigmatized, thought of as "demeaning,"
and thus almost exclusively undertaken by economic immigrants.
Migrant workers currently constitute at least 67 percent of
the Saudi Arabian workforce, though less conservative estimates place that
figure anywhere between 85 and 90 percent. Most economic immigrants come from South
and Southeast Asia and fill positions in the services and health sectors as
nurses, maids, nannies and drivers. Despite strict labor laws and visa
requirements, the Kingdom has come under repeated
criticism for allegations
of abuse leveled against foreign nationals and as a hub for human
trafficking for those in service industries.
Jay Director/AFP/Getty images
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