Saudi women hit the road as driving ban is lifted
Women in Saudi Arabia are now allowed to drive for
the first time since the religiously conservative kingdom overturned the
world's only ban on female motorists.
The lifting of the prohibition on Sunday, which follows a sweeping crackdown on prominent women's rights activists
who staunchly advocated for the right to drive, was first announced
last year as part of the then newly-appointed Crown Prince Mohammed bin
Salman's plans to reform the country.
"Now every woman has the right to drive a car
anywhere in the kingdom," state broadcaster al-Ekhbariya quoted traffic
authorities spokesman Colonel Samy bin Mohammad as saying on Sunday.
Saudi Arabia, which has some of the world's tightest restrictions on women, started issuing its first driving licences for female motorists earlier this month.
On Thursday, it launched a three-day campaign called "place your trust in God and drive" to educate women on driving and raise awareness about safety regulations.
Activists in the region welcomed the lifting on the ban but cautioned
that there were still many hurdles for women wanting to get behind the
wheel.
"This is a very good step, but of course there are so many challenges
that women are facing now with the lifting of the ban," said Suad
Abu-Dayyeh, Middle East consultant for the Equality Now non-governmental
organisation.
"The fees for having lessons are six times more than men," she told
Al Jazeera from Jordan's capital, Amman. "This is one of the
restrictions and this makes women not being able to access driving
licenses in a fast way, in addition to the limited driving schools in
Saudi Arabia."
Decades-long ban
Women's efforts to overturn the ban in a country that h go back decades.
In 1990, more than 40 women drove their cars in the capital, Riyadh - the first public demonstration against the prohibition.
Women are set to take to the roads. After almost three decades of activism - this is a literal and symbolic victory for women's rights activists. But while they fought to put women behind the wheel, now they are behind bars. #StandwithSaudiFeminists @hrw https://t.co/BRwFNQbtDQ pic.twitter.com/6QgJi3gPnm— Rothna Begum (@Rothna_Begum) June 23, 2018
In 2007, activists submitted a petition to the then-King Abdullah,
asking for the right to drive. The next year, one of those activists -
Wajeha al-Huwaider - made a film of herself driving and posted it
online.
Dozens of women followed suit over the next few years.
In a reversal of the long-standing rule, King Salman bin
Abdulaziz Al Saud signed a royal decree in September 2017 that said
women would be allowed to drive "in accordance with Islamic laws".
The move was described as being part of the crown prince's reform drive.
Source: Al Jazeera
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