The Middle East Monitor

Morocco selects 299 women to become public notary officials

Morocco’s Justice Ministry announced on Saturday it had chosen 299 women to fill in the position of public notaries for the first time following a rare fatwa in the Muslim world that allowed women to practice the profession.

For centuries, the profession of public notary has been restricted to men in the majority of the Islamic world countries.

According to the ministry women represented 40 per cent of candidates who passed a test held in May, out of nearly 19,000 applicants.

Read: Moroccans and Algerians demand opening of borders

Typically, a public notary officially documents several transactions, including inheritance, commercial work and marriage.

Morocco’s Justice Ministry described the event as “historic”.

Women practice all judicial professions in Morocco, but the decision to allow them to practice this profession has stirred controversy especially among conservative Salafists.

“We will provide all the support and assistance to the women who will be picked” the head of the national commission for public notaries, Bouchaib Pellawi told AFP.

More from The Middle East Monitor

The Middle East Monitor2 min read
Bin Salman Embarks On Huge Spending Spree To Transform Saudi Economy
Saudi Arabia will spend more in the next ten years than it has spent over the past 300 years since the First Saudi State was created in 1744, the Kingdom's Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman has said. This is a bold declaration of the de facto ruler's
The Middle East Monitor1 min readInternational Relations
'You Are Making The Ground Shake': Earthquake At UN Security Council Briefing On The Situation For Children In Gaza
A video captures an earthquake striking the New York City region on Friday morning, interrupting a United Nations Security Council briefing session on the situation in Gaza. Save the Children's President and CEO, Janti Soeripto, was addressing the ha
The Middle East Monitor1 min read
MEMO In Conversation With Susan Abulhawa
As we mark 10 years since the launch of the Palestine Book Awards, join us for a live conversation with Palestinian novelist and poet Susan Abulhawa to discuss her novel 'Against the Loveless World', described by the New York Times as "a beautiful, u