Kuwait Times

Saudi to allow women into stadium

- —AFP

Saudi Arabia has invited women to a sports stadium for the first time to attend annual national day celebratio­ns with their families, state media said yesterday, opening up a previously male-only venue. Families will be allowed into the King Fahd stadium in Riyadh, used mostly for football matches, and seated separately from single men to mark the kingdom’s 87th National Day this weekend.

“The stadium is ready to receive about 40,000 people divided between individual­s and families to be seated separately,” the official Saudi Press Agency said in a statement, citing the general authority of entertainm­ent. This marks a shift from previous celebratio­ns in the kingdom where women are effectivel­y barred from sports arenas by strict rules on segregatio­n of the sexes in public.

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 country’s guardiansh­ip system, a male family member — normally the father, husband or brother — must grant permission for a woman’s study, travel and other activities. But the kingdom appears to be relaxing some norms as part of its “Vision 2030” plan for economic and social reforms. In July, rights campaigner­s welcomed an “overdue” reform by the education ministry to allow girls to take part in sports at state schools.

Scrap referendum

Meanwhile Saudi Arabia yesterday urged Iraqi Kurdish leader Massud Barzani to call off to planned referendum on independen­ce for his autonomous region to avoid further “crises” in Iraq and the region. A Saudi government official said Barzani should drop plans to hold a referendum “in light of the situation in the region and the dangers it is facing, and in order to avoid new crises”. He called on the Kurdish leader to make use of his “wisdom and experience”, the state-run Saudi Press Agency said.

Holding the referendum as planned on September 25 could have “negative consequenc­es on the political, security and humanitari­an fronts”. It could also “affect efforts to establish security and stability in the region, as well as efforts to fight against terrorist organizati­ons and their activities,” the official added. Regional kingpin Saudi Arabia is the latest country to voice its opposition to the referendum in oil-rich Iraqi Kurdistan. But Barzani has so far resisted pressure from Baghdad and Iraq’s neighbors Turkey and Iran, as well as from the United States and its Western allies, to call off the vote. Iraq’s supreme court has ordered the suspension of the referendum to examine claims made by the federal government that it was unconstitu­tional. The Saudi official called on “all concerned parties to engage in a dialogue that would serve the interests of the entire Iraqi people”.

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