The Washington PostDemocracy Dies in Darkness

She delivered a nightly newscast. In Saudi Arabia, that meant making history.

Weam Al Dakheel’s appearance is part of a broader effort to fold women into the workforce

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September 24, 2018 at 11:48 a.m. EDT

Adapted from a story by The Washington Post’s Amanda Erickson.

Just three months after women were granted the right to drive in Saudi Arabia, Weam Al Dakheel made history by becoming the first woman to deliver a nightly newscast on a state-owned television channel. Al Dakheel appeared alongside a male co-host Thursday night.

Al Dakheel began working for the channel this year. She has previously worked for CNBC Arabia and as an anchor on Al-Arab, a Bahrain-based news channel.

“Jumanah AlShami was the first woman to present morning newscasts in 2016. Today history repeats itself as Weam Al Dakheel becomes the presenter of the main nightly newscast, setting a precedent in a historic first for Saudi TV 1,” the channel posted on its Twitter account.

They grew up in countries where they could drive. Then they moved to Saudi Arabia.

Al Dakheel’s appearance is part of a broader effort to fold women into the workforce. Last year, the crown prince unveiled his ambitious Vision 2030 plan, designed to modernize Saudi Arabia and move it away from its overwhelming reliance on oil exports. Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman hopes to reorient the economy and reinvigorate the workforce.

Among the transformations is the aggressive relaunch of Al Saudiya, the country’s state-run station managed by the Ministry of Culture and Information. The channel has been asked to focus on Salman’s modernization efforts.

Vision 2030 also imagines a more inclusive Saudi Arabia where women are freer to work and move around. Along with being allowed to drive for the first time, women are also now welcome at soccer games, and more employment opportunities are available to them. Salman has said he hopes women will make up a third of the workforce by 2030. Women hold about 22 percent of the country’s jobs.

Saudi Arabia’s city of the future depicts new freedoms for women

But there are limits to how far these efforts stretch. Although women can work more, companies are required to segregate the sexes. Even as women began driving, more than a dozen women’s rights activists in the country were detained and arrested. Some are still behind bars. And one of the most onerous requirements women face — that a male guardian must give them permission to work, marry, travel and even get medical treatment — is still on the books.

In a June poll of 550 women’s rights experts, Saudi Arabia was voted to have the second most discriminatory policies on women and economics.