Monday, April 14, 2008
woman in Oman
These days the high status Omani women enjoy is reflected in the prio
rity accorded to them in the country’s development plans. Women account for half the Sultanate’s population and are encouraged to play their part in the country’s social and economic development alongside their male counterparts. In this situation working women require training to enable them to improve their effectiveness in the workplace. The development of rural and bedu women is of particular importance and they need support to enable them to improve their economic,
social and cultural standards, as well as incentives to participate in the development process. Omani women have played a vital role in the Sultanate for as long as that society has existed. However, while they may once have been content to be good housewives and mothers, perha
ps supplementing the family income with a little local trading or through weaving and handicrafts, they are now at the forefront of political and economic life.In 2003, women accounted for 49% of the population of the Sultanate, a majority of whom are below the age of 18 and have enjoyed the same educational opportunities as boys of a similar age.
Monday, April 7, 2008
Sultan Qaboos Bin Said
Sultan Qaboos bin Said was born in Salalah in Dhofar on 18th November, 1940, the only son of Sultan Said bin Taimur (1932-1970) and the eighth direct descendant of the royal Al Busaidi line, founded in 1744 by Imam Ahmed bin Said. Sultan Qaboos has received his primary and secondary education in Salalah, and When he reached the age of 16, his father sent
him to a private educational establishment in England. At the age of 20, he entered the Royal Military Academy at Sandhurst. After passing out of Sandhurst, he joined a British Infantry battalion on operations in Germany for one year and also held a staff appointment with the British Army.After his militar
y service, Sultan Qaboos studied local government subjects in England and, after a world tour, returned home to Salalah where he studied Islam and the history of his country. Upon his accession to the throne on 23 July 1970, he moved to Muscat where he declared that the country would no longer be known as 'Muscat and Oman', but would be united as the 'Sultanate of Oman'.Since this time, Sultan Qaboos has faced many obstacles, not least than when he came to power. Oman today has an excellent health service, a clear road network and many educational establishments for girls and boys, from nursery levels, to university degrees.His Majesty Sultan Qaboos has described his situation thus:"I am working for Oman - the country and its people...for me it is a delight to see my country and my people in
the situation I imagined from the very first day I assumed power. I feel that I am a man with a mission rather than a man with authority.".
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