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Women have been elected to municipal councils in
Saudi Arabia for the first time after the country's first-ever elections
open to female voters and candidates. A total of 978 women registered
as candidates, they were up against nearly 6,000 men competing for
places on 284 councils. About 130,000 women had registered to vote in
Saturday's poll, compared with 1.35 million men.
As
per election results 20 female candidates were elected to 284 municipal
council seats being contested. Salma bint Hizab al-Oteibi became the
first elected female politician in Saudi Arabia as a result of the
election, when she won a seat on the council in Madrakah in Mecca
province.
Saudi Arabian municipal elections, 2015
The
2015 election was for two thirds of the council seats, on 284 municipal
councils, with both male and female candidates and voters.This was the
first election in Saudi Arabia in which women were allowed to vote, the
first in which they were allowed to run for office and the first in
which women were elected as politicians. The previous two elections, in
2005 and 2011, were for half the council seats and were open to male
candidates and voters only.
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