Saudi Arabia: "Promotion of Virtue" intends to hire women to benefit from their efforts
The presidency of the Saudi Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice intends to employ women in the commission to benefit from their efforts in the work of guidance and counseling.
The Saudi newspaper, Okaz, quoted the head of the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and the Prevention of Vice, Abdul Rahman Al-Sanad, that the presidency has a strategic plan aimed at benefiting from the female component in its work in guidance, counseling and awareness.
Al-Sanad added that the decision came after a session in which the Shura Council discussed the presidency’s report, after which it was supported to benefit from the female component in the commission’s work, provided that this is done in the near future, according to the terms of reference, whether in the regions of the Kingdom or in the presidency.
Al-Sanad touched on the nature of the commission’s work, stressing that it was working in a specific field and today it works in all fields, noting that some people still have shortcomings in the concept of enjoining good and forbidding evil.
Al-Sanad denied that enjoining good and forbidding evil is limited to one of the components of religion, describing this as a shortcoming, and he also stated that in some cases, removing evil is the same evil.
Al-Sinad warned of what he described as the largest and broadest door through which the advocates of sedition entered, which is the deviation from the correct concept of enjoining good and forbidding evil.
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