Women in Saudi Arabia have been granted the right to drive
The kingdom of Saudi Arabia is set to allow women obtain driving licenses,
overturning a cornerstone of Saudi conservatism that had been a cause célèbre
for activists demanding reforms in the fundamentalist kingdom.
King Salman ordered the reform in a royal decree delivered on Tuesday night,
requesting that drivers’ licences be issued to women who wanted them.
Following the decree, women will no longer need permission from a legal
guardian to get a licence and will not need a guardian in the car when they
drive, said the new Saudi ambassador to Washington DC, Prince Khalid bin Salman
bin Abdulaziz.
“I think our leadership understands our society is ready,” he told
reporters.
Asked by reporters if Saudi Arabia planned to relax the
guardianship laws, or take any other steps to expand women’s rights, Salman would
not comment.
The decision comes amid a broad reform program that last week led to women
being allowed into a sports stadium for the first time.
It is the most significant change yet to a rigidly conservative social order
in Saudi Arabia that has strictly demarcated gender roles, and severely limits
the role of women in public life.
The move had been widely anticipated amid a transformation of many aspects
of Saudi society that has been branded by one senior minister as “cultural
revolution disguised as economic reform”. Recent months have seen live concert
performances in Riyadh – albeit to male-only audiences – while the powers of the
once-omnipresent religious police have been curtailed.
Women in Saudi Arabia have been granted the right to drive
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Thursday, October 12, 2017
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