A
Saudi princess said on Tuesday she was offering prizes and scholarships
worth 270,000 dollars a year to boost female journalists in a country
where women are subjected to a host of restrictions.
The goal is "to encourage Saudi women to work in journalism and help
them develop their professional skills through training and
practice," Princess Hassa bint Salman told AFP.
Hassa, daughter of Riyadh governor Prince Salman bin Abdul Aziz, a
half-brother of King Abdullah, said she would allocate 160,000 dollars a
year for scholarships for study and training in a specialised centre
which will launch a special section for women.
Prize money of 54,000 dollars will be awarded every year to women
journalists whose careers span more than 15 years.
Two prizes of 27,000 dollars each will be awarded for the best
journalistic work of the year and for a woman journalist who has
distinguished herself, the British-educated princess said.
"Women journalists are best placed to promote cultural communication
between men and women in Saudi society in a manner compatible with sharia
(Islamic law) and moderate social norms," she said.
She said her initiative was aimed at making up for the absence of women's
journalism departments in Saudi universities and training institutes for
women, and noted that some Saudi female journalists had "excelled
despite working in difficult social and professional conditions."
Women in Saudi Arabia, which applies a rigorous doctrine of Islam known
as Wahhabism, face a host of constraints, including a ban on driving.
They are forced to cover from head to toe in public, and cannot mix with
men other than relatives or travel without written permission from their
male guardian.