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Images of women shelved in Ikea's Saudi catalogue - CNN.com
Images of women shelved in Ikea's Saudi catalogue
(CNN) -- In male-dominated Saudi Arabia, women long have lacked a seat at the table of power.
That harsh reality was reflected in an Ikea furniture catalog distributed in Saudi Arabia that left them missing from other tables as well.
Images of women were airbrushed from copies of the Swedish-based retailer's annual catalog shipped to the religiously conservative Islamic kingdom.
Saudi Arabia turns back 1,000 female pilgrims from Nigeria
For example, one photo in the publication showed a mother, father and two children in a bathroom. In the Saudi version, the image of the woman was removed.
The news, first reported by Sweden's Metro newspaper, nearly made Sweden's trade minister, Ewa Bjorling, fall off her chair -- or throw one.
"I regret that there is still such a long way to go when it comes to gender equality in Saudi Arabia, which these images clearly show," she said.
Saudi princess opens up about women's rights in her country
"As long as women are hindered from visibility and work outside home, Saudi Arabia will lack 50% of their human capital."
Ikea apologized Monday for the airbrushing, saying it "regrets what has happened and understands that people are upset."
"It is not the local franchisee that has requested the retouch of the discussed pictures. The mistake happened during the work process occurring before presenting the draft catalog for Ikea Saudi Arabia. We take full responsibility for the mistakes made," the company said.
Attaining equal rights has been an uphill battle for Saudi women.
Saudi Arabia let women compete in Olympics for first time
There's been a "push to get women into the workforce, which religious conservatives are fiercely resisting," Human Rights Watch said in an August report.
But women are up against a "different but equal" notion of gender equality in Islam.
"Men have a duty to provide for women, women in turn must obey their male guardians and care for house and children," the rights group noted, citing a 2003 scholarly treatise.
Images of women shelved in Ikea's Saudi catalogue
(CNN) -- In male-dominated Saudi Arabia, women long have lacked a seat at the table of power.
That harsh reality was reflected in an Ikea furniture catalog distributed in Saudi Arabia that left them missing from other tables as well.
Images of women were airbrushed from copies of the Swedish-based retailer's annual catalog shipped to the religiously conservative Islamic kingdom.
Saudi Arabia turns back 1,000 female pilgrims from Nigeria
For example, one photo in the publication showed a mother, father and two children in a bathroom. In the Saudi version, the image of the woman was removed.
The news, first reported by Sweden's Metro newspaper, nearly made Sweden's trade minister, Ewa Bjorling, fall off her chair -- or throw one.
"I regret that there is still such a long way to go when it comes to gender equality in Saudi Arabia, which these images clearly show," she said.
Saudi princess opens up about women's rights in her country
"As long as women are hindered from visibility and work outside home, Saudi Arabia will lack 50% of their human capital."
Ikea apologized Monday for the airbrushing, saying it "regrets what has happened and understands that people are upset."
"It is not the local franchisee that has requested the retouch of the discussed pictures. The mistake happened during the work process occurring before presenting the draft catalog for Ikea Saudi Arabia. We take full responsibility for the mistakes made," the company said.
Attaining equal rights has been an uphill battle for Saudi women.
Saudi Arabia let women compete in Olympics for first time
There's been a "push to get women into the workforce, which religious conservatives are fiercely resisting," Human Rights Watch said in an August report.
But women are up against a "different but equal" notion of gender equality in Islam.
"Men have a duty to provide for women, women in turn must obey their male guardians and care for house and children," the rights group noted, citing a 2003 scholarly treatise.