Oman Daily Observer

POTENTIALS

- ZAINAB AL NASSRI, @zainabalna­sseri

When the world is celebratin­g the Women’s Day, some facts about Omani women indicate the country’s concern for the welfare and empowermen­t of women. According to the Public Authority for Social Insurance, the number of insured women in the social insurance system till the end of March 7, 2021, reached 67,088. The Sultanate paid attention to women in all areas with a focus on their involvemen­t in developmen­t plans and programmes, as also on efforts to support and empower them in various sectors. The Sultanate gained internatio­nal praise for having Omani women in constructi­ve roles, achievemen­ts, and successes over the past fifty years in various fields of national work. The Sultanate has been successful in making remarkable progress in gender equality, eliminatin­g all forms of discrimina­tion against women and giving them all their rights at various social, economic and political levels. This is based on the Basic Law of the State, speeches of His Majesty the Sultan, and internatio­nal agreements on human rights, Oman Vision 2040, and the Social Action Strategy 2016-2025.

49.7% OF TOTAL POPULATION

Furthermor­e, Omani women constitute­d 49.7 per cent of the total Omani population till the end of August 2020. Female children in the age group (017 years) constitute­d 42.8 per cent of the total Omani females in 2019. Women’s access to education, jobs, and their participat­ion in various developmen­t fields have contribute­d to enhancing their role in society and developing their active participat­ion in all areas of national work. Equal opportunit­ies in education, both basic and higher, and encouragin­g them to choose in different discipline­s and colleges, whether inside or outside the Sultanate, have enabled them to achieve higher ranks in jobs and in many specialise­d fields. The total enrollment rate for females in grades 10-12 was 96.5 per cent in the academic year 2018/2019, while the female illiteracy rate decreased from 11.4 per cent in 2014 to 6.5 per cent in 2019. As for higher education, the percentage of Omani females in higher educationa­l institutio­ns increased to more than 73 per cent, and they constitute­d nearly 40 per cent of the total number of students on scholarshi­ps. The successes achieved by Omani women in public and private work have varied, and the government has affirmed that it will spare no effort to provide more support to Omani women and involve them in all sectors of work and production to continue to fulfil their responsibi­lities in the country’s comprehens­ive developmen­t process.

WOMEN WORKFORCE

The percentage of Omani women working in government and private sectors reached 33.2 per cent of the total workers until the end of July 2020. However, their percentage in the private sector reached 26.4 per cent. The economic activity of Omani women is concentrat­ed in the wholesale and retail trade sector, followed by constructi­on, financial activities, insurance activities and then the manufactur­ing sector. The data also indicated that the number of females in crafts industry constitute­s 88 per cent of the total number of craftsmen. Besides, the ninth period of the Shura Council elections (2019-2023), which took place in October 2019, witnessed an increase in the number of female candidates compared to the previous period, as their number reached 40 out of 637 candidates who competed for 86 seats in the council. The number of women voters reached 337,543 represente­d 47.3 per cent of the total number of voters. For the current period, two women won the membership of the Council. Omani woman carried the Sultanate message of peace to various countries of the world and represente­d her country in an ideal and honourable manner while building bridges of close relations with the countries of the world. Omani women have also participat­ed with their male counterpar­ts in representi­ng the Sultanate in internatio­nal forums, as many Omani women employees work in the diplomatic services and the Sultanate’s embassies.

BEIRUT: Lebanon’s president asked security forces to prevent roadblocks after protesters shut main roads across the country for a seventh straight day on Monday in anger at more than a year of economic crisis and months of political paralysis.

Measures agreed in a meeting with top security and government officials included ordering a crackdown on anyone “violating the monetary and credit” law, including foreign exchange bureaus, a statement said.

Since the Lebanese pound, which has lost 85% of its value, tumbled to a new low last week, protesters have blocked roads daily.

“We have said several times that there will be an escalation because the state isn’t doing anything,” said Pascale Nohra, a protester on a main highway in the Jal al Dib area.

As Lebanon’s financial crisis erupted in late 2019, a wave of mass protest rocked the country, with outrage boiling over at leaders who have overseen decades of state graft.

Tens of thousands of jobs have

Tens of thousands of jobs have been lost, bank accounts have been frozen and many have been plunged into poverty

been lost, bank accounts have been frozen and many have been plunged into poverty.

On Monday, three main roads leading south into the capital were blocked while in Beirut itself, protesters briefly closed a road in front of the central bank.

In Tyre in the south, one man tried to burn himself by pouring gasoline on his body but civil defence members stopped him in time, the state news agency said.

In Tripoli in the north, one of Lebanon’s poorest cities, demonstrat­ors built a brick wall one metre high to prevent cars from passing through allowing a pathway for emergency cases.

“The new developmen­ts on the financial and security fronts must be tackled quickly,” the presidency statement said.

After a port explosion devastated whole tracts of Beirut in August and killed 200 people, Caretaker Prime Minister Hassan Diab’s government resigned.

But the new prime minister-designate, Saad al Hariri, is at loggerhead­s with President Michel Aoun and has been unable to form a new government that must carry out the reforms needed to unlock internatio­nal aid.

On Saturday, Diab threatened to quit even caretaker work to raise the pressure on those blocking the formation of a new government. — Reuters

 ?? — AFP ?? A man stands next to flaming tires at a make-shift roadblock set-up by anti-government demonstrat­ors in the area of Dora on the northern outskirts of Beirut.
— AFP A man stands next to flaming tires at a make-shift roadblock set-up by anti-government demonstrat­ors in the area of Dora on the northern outskirts of Beirut.

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