How reforms have allowed Saudi women to excel in professional and recreational sports

Saudi women are now free to practice sports with support from the Saudi leadership. (Supplied)
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Updated 09 March 2023
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How reforms have allowed Saudi women to excel in professional and recreational sports

  • Thanks to Vision 2030’s Quality of Life program, women’s sports federations and national teams have flourished 
  • Since 2015, many more Saudi women are representing their country in regional and international tournaments

JEDDAH: Recent reforms targeting the inclusion of women in sports in Saudi Arabia are paying dividends. For the first time in history, young Saudi females are participating in football, taekwondo, boxing, motor car racing, tennis, fencing, golf, and more.

Since 2015, small yet significant steps have been made, with Saudi women making international appearances thanks to the establishment of several sports federations. Female national teams have been set up, and Saudi women are now free to practice sports with support from the Saudi leadership.




Saudi sportswomen have notched up around 100 medals in regional and international events. (Supplied)

As a result, women across the Kingdom have been stepping up to the challenge and representing their country in regional and international tournaments.

With the support of Saudi Vision 2030’s Quality of Life program, there has been a 59 percent increase in the number of athletes participating in local competitions has increased by 59 percent since 2015.

There has also been a 166-percent increase in the number of women competing in international competition, a 117-percent increase in the number of coaches, and a 150-percent increase in the number of female athletes.




Saudi fencer Hasna Al-Hammad. (Supplied)

In the same period, the number of official female national teams representing the Kingdom went from zero to 23. Saudi sportswomen have notched up around 100 medals in regional and international events.

Meanwhile, 12 Saudi women currently hold prominent international sporting positions and there are 38 Saudi sports federations, ensuring inclusive progress throughout the sector.

The progress hasn’t been limited to team sports. There have been several individuals who blazing a trail in their respective fields.

Arab News has compiled a list of a few pioneering female athletes from across the Kingdom who are paving the way for other young women eager to show their talent and passion.

Twenty-eight-year-old Rasha Al-Khamis was the kingdom’s first certified female boxer. She fell in love with the sport while studying at the University of Southern California.




Rasha Al-Khamis is the Kingdom’s first certified female boxer. (Supplied)

When she returned home, she had a chance encounter with the president of the Saudi Boxing Federation, and she suggested ways to boost female participation in the sport. She became a member of the Saudi Boxing Federation. The rest is history.

Mashael Al-Obaidan is the first female to obtain a rally license in Saudi Arabia. She got her first taste of motorsports riding dirt bikes and quads in the desert when she was young and has now participated in the prestigious Dakar Rally.

Anoud Al-Asmari, 35, is Saudi Arabia’s first female football referee and the first Saudi woman to receive her international referee’s badge from the Federation of International Football Associations.

Lubna Al-Omair is the first Saudi female to become an Olympic fencer. She co-founded the Dhahran Fencing Club — the first in the country to train women in the sport.

Dalma Malhas is a Saudi Arabian showjumper and became the first Saudi Arabian female athlete from any sport to compete at the Youth Olympic Games when she took part in the individual equestrian jumping competition at the 2010 Games in Singapore.




Dalma Malhas is a Saudi Arabian showjumper. (Supplied)

Encouraged by her mother, Arwa Mutabagani, and coach Duccio Bartalucci, she won the Mohammed bin Rashid Al-Maktoum Creative Sports Award in 2011.

Farah Jefry is an 18-year-old footballer who plays as a midfielder for Jeddah Eagles. She has become the first Saudi sportswoman to be signed up by Adidas.

Yara Alhogbani, the Kingdom’s first female professional tennis player, hopes to climb the Women’s Tennis Association rankings and continue to represent her country internationally.

She has already participated in various tournaments and was the first Saudi female to play at the pro tour level and achieve an international ranking.

Ragad Al-Naimi is the first professional Saudi female boxer, having been introduced to the sport while studying in the US. Her passion for boxing compelled her to continue training upon her return to the Kingdom, which has witnessed a 300-percent surge in male and female boxers registered with the Saudi Arabian Boxing Federation since 2015. Last month in Diriyah, Al-Naimi won her debut fight on points.

Dania Akeel is a passionate motorsports athlete who was the first Saudi female to receive a license for Motorcycle Circuit Racing. Following an injury, Akeel moved into rally driving and became the first Saudi female to participate in an international rally competition.




Dania Akeel was the first Saudi female to receive a license for Motorcycle Circuit Racing. (Supplied)

Leena Al-Hakeem is a rising star of the Saudi Jiu-Jitsu team. The 17-year-old has already won medals at some of the most prestigious competitions regionally and globally, including the Jiu-Jitsu International Federation Asian Championship, the Abu Dhabi World Professional Jiu-Jitsu Championship, and the Jiu-Jitsu International Federation World Championship.


Cooperation is ‘essential’ to fight misinformation, says DCO secretary-general

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Cooperation is ‘essential’ to fight misinformation, says DCO secretary-general

  • Arab News is first media partner of Digital Cooperation Organization
  • Deemah Al-Yahya praises Arab News for taking ‘significant’ decision

KUWAIT CITY: Cooperation between all sectors of society remains an “essential” weapon to fight misinformation, says Digital Cooperation Organization Secretary-General Deemah Al-Yahya.

Speaking on the sidelines of the 5th DCO General Assembly in Kuwait recently, Al-Yahya underscored what she considers to be the critical partnership between Arab News and the organization.

During the interview, she also highlighted the organization’s expansion and the opportunities presented by artificial intelligence.

“Well, this partnership with Arab News is truly significant, especially at this time. The leadership that Arab News showed in stepping up and partnering with DCO shows the real commitment to combating misinformation and disinformation,” Al-Yahya told Arab News.

On Thursday, Arab News became the first media outlet to partner with the DCO in a joint pledge to combat misinformation and mitigate its growing global threats.

“This is becoming a threat to all our societies, economies as well,” Al-Yahya said.

“And it is increasing when it comes to its negative implications, either from a government perspective or also from a private sector perspective,” she said.

“So therefore, we are very much excited to partner with Arab News in providing the right awareness, providing the right frameworks, and also providing the right technologies that can help countries and nations combat misinformation,” she added.

Speaking on the sidelines of the 5th DCO General Assembly in Kuwait recently, Al-Yahya underscored what she considers to be the critical partnership between Arab News and the organization. (AN Photo/Jaafar Saleh)

According to the DCO, misinformation erodes trust in governments, media, digital platforms, and markets, which is a core currency of the digital economy. It can trigger financial volatility, damage reputations, disrupt public services, and undermine public health and social cohesion.

Al-Yahya said that if there was one key message she wants stakeholders, officials, media, and private sector partners to take away from the general assembly, it was that “cooperation is essential.”

“No nation can accelerate their growth, or digital economy growth, without cooperation. We have to work together.

“DCO is a platform that brings in governments, private sector, civil society together and makes sure that we convert dialogue into action,” she said.

“The message is, let’s work together, and let’s make digital prosperity for all,” she added.

The DCO general assembly convened in Kuwait City under Omar Saud Al-Omar, Kuwait’s minister of state for communication affairs and chairperson of the DCO council for the current term.

The annual assembly brought together the full digital ecosystem — including ministers from member states, observers, partners, policymakers, CEOs, innovators, and representatives from more than 60 countries — to help shape the global digital agenda.

The theme this year was “Inclusive Prosperity in the Age of AI,” and Al-Yahya emphasized that while AI offers immense opportunities, it was even more critical to unite efforts in bridging the digital economic divide that the technology may create.

“We’re looking at AI right now, and how it’s opening opportunities — $15 trillion, we expect, added to the global GDP (Gross Domestic Product) because of AI,” Al-Yahya said.

“Now that is an abundance of opportunities for countries to diversify their economy. But then, how many countries can benefit? And this is where 70 percent of that number will go to fewer countries, even less than 10 countries.”

“And this is where we have to bridge that gap. And bridging that gap will not come without the commitment, collectively, from member states to share either infrastructure, to share talent and best practices,” she added.

The DCO marked its fifth year since its inception in 2020. It has helped to facilitate social prosperity and the growth of the digital economy through unified efforts with its member nations.

Al-Yahya said the DCO is the first global organization of its kind in the region, and revealed ongoing conversations with Azerbaijan, China, Lebanon, Iraq, Poland, and Palestine in becoming new members.

“It really fills me with pride that it was just an initiative five years ago, and now it is a credible organization where countries are flooding to join DCO.

“And that’s a sentiment of the great power that the secretariat and its team are driving to serve its member states, and also the commitment of the member states to work together, and to cooperate,” Al-Yahya said.

 “It brings me pride. To see DCO grow in five years to be this platform of influence, of power, and of impact, which is most importantly, impact.”

“We do see the outcomes of DCO growing and growing every year. And the speed, agility, is very much appreciated by our member states,” she added.

The event has ended and preparations are now underway for the 2027 general assembly under the presidency of Pakistan.