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February 2009
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Saudi King Appoints First Woman to Council, Makes Other Changes

King Abdullah shook up his country this weekend by dismissing two religious leaders, and historically naming a woman to his council.  saudi-king

That, along with other appointments, are part of the biggest shake-ups in Saudi Arabia in 20 years.

Noura Al-Fayez was appointed to the Saudi Council of Ministers. She will serve in a new position as deputy minister for women’s education.

“I’m very proud to be nominated and selected for such a prestigious position,” Al-Fayez told CNN on Saturday. “I hope that other ladies, females, will follow in the future.”

“People are very excited about this,” said Khaled Al-Maeena, editor-in-chief of Arab News, an English-language daily newspaper in Saudi Arabia. “This sends a clear signal that the King means business. Instead of appointing some bureaucrat, he appointed a woman.”

Analysts said they indicated King Abdullah’s determination to put his progressive stamp on the country’s ultra-conservative institutions.

In addition to naming al-Fayez to the council, the King sacked the leader of the Muttawa religious police. The Muttawa, who enforce Saudi Arabia’s strict-but-eroding Islamic social mores, such as complete separation of unrelated members of the opposite sexes, have been widely feared in Saudi Arabia.

Ghaith was replaced by Sheikh Abdul Aziz al-Humain, who quickly gave notice of changes to come.

“We will try to be close to the heart of every citizen. Their concerns are ours,” Humain told Al-Arabiya news channel.

The 83 year old Abdullah, who ascended the throne after the death of his half-brother King Fahd in August 2005, had made mainly minor changes in the administration since then, amid expectations to put his mark more deeply on the government.

Also, for the first time, the King named representatives of all four Sunni Islam schools of religious law to the Council of Ulemas, the leading clerics of the kingdom.

Previously only thinkers from the Wahhabi school which dominates the conservative Saudi version of Islam were represented on the council.

Still, the most powerful cabinet positions of defense, interior, and foreign affairs were unchanged, remaining in the hands of the key princes of the royal family who have held the jobs for decades.

Belgium Names New Antarctica Research Station After Princess

She’s not yet eight years old, but Princess Elisabeth of Belgium already has a science research center named after her. princess-elisabeth-station

Belgium opened the new 20 million euro “zero emissions” polar science station in Antarctica on Sunday, returning to the icy continent to study climate change 42 years after closing its first base there.

The spaceship-like base sits on stilts on a ridge a few miles (kilometers) north of the Soer Rondane Mountains. It will focus on analyzing nearby deep ice shelves.

The Princess Elisabeth Station will also be the first to rely on wind turbines rather than diesel generators for power

The base is expected to have a lifespan of 25 years and will conduct research in climatology, glaciology and microbiology. Teams of scientists, including glaciologists, are already at work there from Belgium, Japan, France, Britain and the United States.

The station was inaugurated Sunday by Belgian Defense Minister Pieter De Crem and other government officials.

“It is really important that as a small country we can show our participation in large international efforts here in Antarctica,” De princess-elisabeth2Crem told VRT television from Antarctica.

The Belgian government partially funds the public-private project.

The IPF said the new station “raises new standards” in research on the inhospitable polar continent.

“The Princess Elisabeth station attests that there is growing public interest in projects carrying a message of sustainable development, especially in terms of energy management,” the polar group said in a statement.

“The conception of a ‘zero emission’ building capable of standing up to the extreme conditions in the Antarctic goes to show that similar techniques can also be deployed in more temperate areas of the world,” it added.

Princess Elisabeth is the oldest child of Crown Prince Philippe and Crown Princess Mathilde. She is second in line to the Belgian throne after her father.

On Friday, the little princess visited the International Polar Foundation which was part of the inauguration of the scientific base.