The Asian Age

We don’t need no thought control

Petition urges to end the guardiansh­ip system

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Riyadh, Sept. 27: Thousands of Saudis have signed a petition urging an end to the guardiansh­ip system that gives men control over the study, marriage and travel of female relatives, activists said on Tuesday.

The petition calls for the kingdom’s women to be treated “as a full citizen, and decide an age where she will be an adult and will be responsibl­e for her own acts”, said campaigner Aziza Al Yousef of Riyadh.

The retired university professor told AFP that she tried unsuccessf­ully to deliver the petition containing 14,700 names to the Royal Court on Monday.

The activists will now send it by mail as requested.

Saudi Arabia has some of the world’s tightest restrictio­ns on women, and is the only country where they are not allowed to drive.

Under the guardiansh­ip system a male family member, normally the father, husband or brother, must grant permission for a woman’s study, travel and other activities. Activists say that even female prisoners have to be received by the guardian upon their release, meaning that some have to languish in jail or a shelter beyond their sentences if the man does not want to accept them.

The petition calls for the kingdom’s women to be treated as a full citizen and decide an age where she will be an adult and will be responsibl­e for her own acts — Aziza Al Yousef, Campaigner

“We are suffering from this guardiansh­ip system,” said Nassima al Sadah, an activist in Eastern Province.

The campaign is an outgrowth of a Twitter hashtag in Arabic that started more than two months ago calling for an end to guardiansh­ip.

“This momentum got very high after the hashtag was created” and following a report by the New York- based Human Rights Watch, Yousef said.

 ??  ?? Aziza al Yousef
Aziza al Yousef

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