Maha Al Muneef (Arabic: لدكتورة مها عبدالله المنيف ; born 1960) is the executive director of the National Family Safety Program (NFSP) in Saudi Arabia. She is a specialist in pediatric infectious disease, and has worked to spread awareness about domestic violence and victims of child abuse.[1]

Maha Al Muneef
لدكتورة مها عبدالله المنيف
Maha Al Muneef receiving award in March 2016
Born1960
Occupation(s)Pediatric infectious disease specialist, activist
Known forExecutive Director of the National Family Safety Program (NFSP), domestic violence advocacy
AwardsInternational Women of Courage Award (2014)

Life

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Al Muneef was born in Saudi Arabia in 1960, the same year that girls were first allowed to be educated. She went to school and university in Saudi Arabia, but she indicates that her skills were honed during a decade of working in the USA. In Saudi Arabia she was told facts but in America she learnt how to work through a crisis.[2]

 
President Obama presents award to Al Muneef in 2016

From 2009 to 2013, Al Muneef also served as an adviser to Saudi Arabia's Consultative Council, the Shura Council. In August 2013, the Council of Ministers adopted landmark legislation to protect victims of domestic violence. Al Muneef and the National Family Safety Program played a role in drafting and advising on the "Protection from Abuse" law, which defines and criminalizes domestic violence for the first time in Saudi Arabia.[3] Maha Al Muneef was also awarded the 2014 International Women of Courage Award for this humanitarian work in particular. She could not attend the ceremony so Barack Obama awarded her the prize in Saudi Arabia in April 2014.

The NFSP was created in 2005 in order to combat domestic violence and child abuse in Saudi Arabia. The NFSP has developed advocacy programs, reported on domestic violence and child abuse statistics in Saudi Arabia, and led efforts to provide services for victims of abuse.[1]

References

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  1. ^ a b "2014 International Women of Courage Award Winners". State.gov. 2014-03-03. Retrieved 2014-04-10.
  2. ^ audi receives International Women of Courage Award, Al Monitor, 2016, Retrieved 17 July 2016
  3. ^ Joe Stork (2013-09-03). "Saudi Arabia: New Law to Criminalize Domestic Abuse". Human Rights Watch. Retrieved 2014-04-10.