In a rare move, Saudi Arabia has appointed a female - Princess Haifa al-Mogrin - as its envoy to UNESCO.

Saudi Arabia has named Princess Haifa Al-Mogrin as its representative to UNESCO, a rare female appointment to an international body, as the ultra-conservative country works to revamp its image.

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has been on a modernisation drive, seeking to project a moderate, business-friendly image to boost investment and help diversify the economy away from oil.

"King Salman has approved the delegation of Prince Haifa as permanent representative to UNESCO," the United Nation's cultural agency, the official Saudi Press Agency said Wednesday.



The princess has held several positions in the Saudi government since leaving her role as university lecturer, Gulf News reported.

She has also held the role of assistant undersecretary of Sustainable Development Affairs, acting assistant Undersecretary for G20 affairs and was the head of the Sustainable Development Goals Sector.

The announcement comes almost a year after the kingdom appointed its first woman ambassador to the United States, Princess Rima bint Bandar.

Saudi Arabia has recently eased restrictions on women - including allowing them to drive and receive passports and travel abroad without permission from male relatives.

Under de facto ruler Prince Mohammed, it has also opened the country to sporting, cultural and entertainment events.

As part of the reforms, the oil-rich kingdom, which has five UNESCO World Heritage sites, is also working to grow its tourism sector.

It announced in September that it would offer tourist visas for the first time, relaxing rules that had largely restricted visits to business travellers and Muslim pilgrims.

But Riyadh has also faced intense diplomatic fallout over the murder of dissident journalist Jamal Khashoggi, who was killed and dismembered in the kingdom's consulate in Istanbul in 2018.

Saudi Arabia has also been criticised for mounting a crackdown on dissidents, including influential preachers and intellectuals.

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In 2018, authorities arrested at least a dozen women activists, most of whom were detained in a wide-ranging crackdown just before the historic lifting of the decades-old ban on female motorists.

Many of the women have accused interrogators of sexual harassment and torture while in custody. Saudi authorities deny the accusations.



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