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The former philosophy student began her career in a rehabilitation service for sick Palestinians. Uninspired, she moved to intelligence services and for eight years worked as a liaison with foreign spy agencies. She declined to discuss her former career. In January, Abbas appointed Ghanem as governor of Ramallah, the most important of the West Bank's 10 Palestinian administrative districts. It's a place where Palestinian women are clustered in senior positions. Janet Mikhail, a 65-year-old retired school principal, was elected Ramallah city mayor in 2005. Last year, Khuloud Faqih, 35, was one of two women judges appointed in the West Bank's Islamic courts. Another woman, Abir Awdeh, heads the Palestine Capital Market Authority, which regulates the non-banking financial sector, such as insurance companies and mortgage lenders. Four women serve in Fayyad's 22-member Cabinet, the highest number in any government since the Palestinian Authority was established in the 1990s.
In Gaza, one woman, Jamila Shanti, occupies a senior position in Hamas' decision-making body. They also have 6 female legislators and there are several women in senior municipal posts. Still, Ghanem can rightfully claim a precedent as the first Palestinian female governor
-- and also the youngest person to be appointed. And even if Ghanem were to stumble in her position someday, the mere fact of her appointment paves the way for others, said Ashrawi. "Every time a woman challenges and defies a taboo, she does it for all other women."
[Associated
Press;
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