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Saudi women must uncover faces for security checks, council says
Published in The Egyptian Gazette on 06 - 11 - 2012

DUBAI - Saudi Arabian authorities have rejected a conservative proposal to allow women to keep their faces covered during security checks, local media reported yesterday.
A draft law would have allowed women to continue wearing
veils during the checks, and would have required their identity
cards to be based on fingerprints instead of photographs, the
Saudi Gazette said.
The Shura Council, a consultative body appointed by the
king, rejected the plan on Sunday, although it agreed that
female security staff should carry out checks on women, the
newspaper reported. It did not say who had proposed the law.
Under Wahhabism, the branch of Sunni Islam practised in
Saudi Arabia, men and women are largely segregated in public
areas. Women need a male guardian's permission to work, travel
or open a bank account.
Under King Abdullah, the government has pressed for women to
have better education and job opportunities, and will allow them
to vote in future municipal elections. But conservative forces
in the kingdom have continued to push back against reforms.


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