Draped in a long black abaya, French tourist Virginie de Tinguy gingerly picks her way up a majestic stone staircase, careful to lift the heavy folds of fabric out of the way of her feet, lest she ...
A Kenyan mother, Esther, and her newborn son, Abudy, were living on the street in Riyadh, Saudi Arabia.Credit... Supported by By Vivian Nereim and Abdi Latif Dahir Photographs by Iman Al-Dabbagh ...
Kenya is staking its economy on women like Purity Marangu, who left her family to work in Saudi Arabia. They work as housekeepers, normally a safe job. But many have been assaulted, starved and worse.
US President Donald Trump (C-R) speaks during a bilateral meeting with Crown Prince and Prime Minister Mohammed bin Salman of Saudi Arabia (C-L) in the Oval Office of the White House on November 18, ...
RIYADH — Ameerah Altaweel, Chairwoman of the Board of Directors of the Saudi Women Leaders Network, stated that the network—comprising 220 members—is actively working to empower women in the labor ...