Northwest Arkansas Democrat-Gazette

Ivanka Trump cites Mideast women’s gains

- AYA BATRAWY

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Ivanka Trump on Sunday lauded a handful of Mideast countries, including close U.S. allies Saudi Arabia and the United Arab Emirates, for embarking on “significan­t reforms” to advance women’s rights, while speaking at a gathering of women entreprene­urs and regional leaders in Dubai.

The daughter of U.S. President Donald Trump was delivering the keynote address at the two-day Global Women’s Forum held in an opulent resort overlookin­g the city’s Persian Gulf coastline.

“We know that when women are free to succeed, families thrive, communitie­s flourish and nations are stronger,” Trump said.

Her comments throughout the speech drew applause, particular­ly when she praised Saudi Arabia. Despite changes there, women’s rights activists and other campaigner­s are imprisoned and facing trial on vague charges related to national security.

The theme of the forum in Dubai was “The Power of Influence.” It was an apt theme for Trump, whose loyalty and support for her father’s presidency saw her and her husband, Jared Kushner, take up formal roles in the White House as his advisers.

The 38-year-old mother of three has positioned herself as an Oval Office confidante while spearheadi­ng initiative­s that broadly back women’s empowermen­t. Her husband has become a top adviser on U.S. Mideast policy.

Once the owner of an eponymous fashion line, Ivanka Trump has wielded her proximity to the president to promote policies affecting women and deliver speeches around the world about women’s economic empowermen­t. She meets with world leaders as a key White House official. Some of her efforts even have some bipartisan support in Washington.

In her keynote speech at the women’s forum in Dubai on Sunday, Trump touted what she said was the progress of women in the United States.

“Today, American women are leading in every aspect of society. Last year, there were more women than men in the United States workforce, with women securing over 70% of new jobs,” she said in her address.

Trump made no mention, however, of legislativ­e obstacles in the U.S. around paid family leave, which she and the U.S president support. Currently, just a few U.S. states offer paid leave.

During her speech in Dubai, Trump congratula­ted Saudi Arabia for recent changes in the law that allow women to travel abroad and obtain a passport without the permission of a male relative. In 2018, a ban on women driving cars was lifted. The changes are part of a wide-ranging push to transform the Saudi economy, attract greater foreign investment and ease internatio­nal criticism.

Trump pointed to changes in other Mideast countries, as well. She said Bahrain had introduced legislatio­n against discrimina­tion in the workplace; Jordan had eliminated legal restrictio­ns on women’s ability to work at night; Morocco had expanded women’s land rights; and Tunisia had introduced laws to combat domestic violence.

She said, though, more work needed to be done. She noted that across the region, women on average still have only half the legal rights of men.

The audience for her speech included Dubai ruler Sheikh Mohammed bin Rashid Al Maktoum, Dubai Crown Prince Hamdan bin Mohammed Al Maktoum, World Bank President David Malpass and Internatio­nal Monetary Fund chief Kristalina Georgieva.

The Dubai ruler is extremely popular at home and is seen as a modernizin­g force. He has, however, faced some criticism abroad concerning women’s rights after reports that one of his daughters tried to flee the country and was forcibly returned. In previous years, Jordanian Princess Haya, with whom Sheikh Mohammed has two children, would have attended a forum of this kind by his side, but she, too, has reportedly fled the country and is seeking custody of their children in a British court.

The United Arab Emirates and Saudi Arabia have worked to cultivate close ties with the Trump administra­tion and were early supporters of the Women’s Empowermen­t Fund, a World Bank initiative to help female entreprene­urs that Ivanka Trump strongly backs. During the first trip abroad of her father’s presidency to Saudi Arabia, the two Gulf countries pledged $100 million to the fund.

In her speech at Sunday’s forum, Trump commended UAE leaders for “removing barriers to women joining the workforce and developing a national strategy that recognizes that women are central to sustainabl­e growth.”

She noted that although 70% of UAE university graduates are women, only 10% of its total national income is derived from women.

 ?? (AP/Kamran Jebreili) ?? Ivanka Trump (right), the daughter and senior adviser to U.S. President Donald Trump, is received by Lamia Abdulaziz Khan, executive director of the Global Women’s Forum, upon her arrival Sunday to deliver a keynote address at the forum in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.
(AP/Kamran Jebreili) Ivanka Trump (right), the daughter and senior adviser to U.S. President Donald Trump, is received by Lamia Abdulaziz Khan, executive director of the Global Women’s Forum, upon her arrival Sunday to deliver a keynote address at the forum in Dubai, United Arab Emirates.

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