Saudi women will now be allowed to drive cars, Saudi King Salman ordered on Tuesday.
The order ended a conservative tradition seen by rights activists as an emblem of the Islamic kingdom’s repression of women.
The kingdom, the birthplace of Islam, has been
widely criticized for being the only country in the world that bans
women from driving, despite gradual improvement on some women’s issues
in recent years and ambitious government targets to increase their
public role, especially in the workforce.
Despite trying to cultivate a more modern image in
recent years, the driving ban had been a longstanding stain on Saudi
Arabia’s international image.
The royal decree ordered the formation of a
ministerial body to give advice within 30 days and then implement the
order by June 24, 2018, according to state news agency SPA.
It stipulated that the move must “apply and adhere
to the necessary Sharia standards”, referring to Islamic law. It gave no
details but said a majority of the Council of Senior Religious
Scholars, Saudi Arabia’s top clerical body, had approved its
permissibility.
An hour after the official announcement in Saudi
Arabia, a jubilant Saudi ambassador to Washington, Prince Khaled bin
Salman, said it was “an historic and big day in our kingdom”.
“I think our leadership understands that our
society is ready. I think it’s the right decision at the right time,”
the ambassador said.
Positive reactions quickly poured in from inside
the kingdom and around the world, with the U.S. State Department
welcoming the move as “a great step in the right direction”.
For more than 25 years, women activists have
campaigned to be allowed to drive, defiantly taking to the road,
petitioning the king and posting videos of themselves behind the wheel
on social media. The protests brought them arrest and harassment.
Activist Manal al-Sherif, who was arrested in 2011
after a driving protest, took to Twitter following the king’s
announcement to express her relief. “Today, the last country on earth to
allow women to drive… we did it”, she wrote.
Latifa al-Shaalan, a member of the Shura Council,
an advisory body, said the decision would strengthen women’s employment
in the private sector.
“This is an historic day and I cannot find the
words to express my feelings and the feelings of thousands of Saudi
women,” she said on Arabiya TV.
In Saudi Arabia, a top Arab ally of the United
States, women are legally subject to a male guardian, who must give
approval to basic decisions they make in fields including education,
employment, marriage, travel plans and even medical treatment.
Women in the kingdom are also bound by law to wear
long robes and a headscarf and require the consent of a male guardian
for most legal actions.
*Reuters
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