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EGYPTAIR STEWARDESSES BEGIN WEARING
HIJAB
CAIRO: EgyptAir stewardesses, who campaigned to wear headscarf,
have begun donning the hijab for the first time since the national carrier was
founded in 1932, a company official said on Sunday. The first flight attendants
dressed in the hijab, which mainstream clerics say is mandatory, worked on
flights to Jeddah in Saudi Arabia on Saturday.
Under Egyptian president Hosni Mubarak, who was toppled in an uprising in early
2011, the hijab was taboo for women in some state institutions such as state
television and the national carrier.
But after the election of the Islamist President Muhammad Morsi in June, women in television and EgyptAir campaigned for permission to wear the hijab, like most Muslim women in Egypt. The company had agreed to allow the stewardesses to wear the hijab after a strike by cabin crews in September that also demanded better pay.
An EgyptAir official said a foreign company has been contracted
to design a cap and headscarf for the estimated 250 stewardesses who want to
wear the hijab, out of 900 women working for EgyptAir.
In September, an anchorwoman was the first woman to appear on state television
wearing the scarf, which traditionally covers the hair and neck. Some more
liberal women wear the hijab to cover only their hair. afp
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