The Asian Age

First Saudi women get driving licences

■ TEN SAUDI women swapped their foreign licences for Saudi ones in multiple cities, including the capital Riyadh, as the kingdom prepares to end its ban on June 24 ■ THE MOVE, which follows a government crackdown on women activists, is part of a much- pub

- ANUJ CHOPRA

Saudi Arabia on Monday began issuing its first driving licences to women in decades, authoritie­s said, just weeks before the historic lifting of the conservati­ve kingdom's ban on female motorists.

Ten Saudi women swapped their foreign licences for Saudi ones in multiple cities, including the capital Riyadh, as the kingdom prepares to end its ban on June 24.

The move, which follows a government crackdown on women activists, is part of a much- publicised liberalisa­tion drive launched by powerful Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman as he seeks to modernise the petro- state.

"Ten Saudi women made history on Monday when they were issued driving licences," said the informatio­n ministry's Centre for Internatio­nal Communicat­ion ( CIC).

"Expectatio­ns are that next week an additional 2,000 women will join the ranks of licensed drivers in the kingdom."

The official Saudi Press Agency said the swap came after women applicants were made to undergo a "practical test", but it did not offer details.

"It's a dream come true that I am about to drive in the kingdom," Rema Jawdat, one of the women to receive a licence, was quoted as saying by the CIC.

"Driving to me represents having a choice -the choice of independen­t movement. Now we have that option," added Jawdat, an official at the ministry of economy and planning who has previous driving experience in Lebanon and Switzerlan­d.

In preparatio­n for the lifting of the ban, Saudi Arabia last week passed a landmark law to criminalis­e sexual harassment, introducin­g a prison term of up to five years and a maximum penalty of 300,000 riyals ($ 80,000).

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