New Straits Times

Saudi women drive into the history books

Celebratio­ns, tears as kingdom lifts ban on female motorists

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SAUDI women celebrated taking the wheel for the first time in decades yesterday as the kingdom overturned the world’s only ban on female motorists, a historic reform expected to usher in a new era of social mobility.

The much-trumpeted move is part of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s plan to modernise the conservati­ve petrostate, but it has been dented by the jailing of female activists who long opposed the driving ban.

Women here and other cities began zipping around streets bathed in amber light soon after the ban was lifted at midnight, with some blasting music from behind the wheel.

“I feel free like a bird,” said talkshow host and writer Samar Almogren as she cruised across the capital.

Television presenter Sabika alDosari called it “a historic moment for every Saudi woman” before driving a sedan across the border to the kingdom of Bahrain.

The lifting of the ban, long a glaring symbol of repression, is expected to be transforma­tive for many women, freeing them from dependence on private chauffeurs or male relatives.

Euphoria was mixed with disbelief as women across the kingdom flooded social media with videos of their maiden car rides, with a heavy presence of policemen, some of whom distribute­d flowers to the first-time drivers.

“This is a great achievemen­t,” billionair­e Saudi Prince AlWaleed bin Talal said as his daughter, Reem, drove a family SUV, with his granddaugh­ters applauding from the back seat.

“Now women have their freedom,” he added in a video posted on Twitter.

Many Saudi women ebullientl­y declared plans online to drive for coffee or ice cream, a mundane experience elsewhere in the world but a dazzling novelty in the desert kingdom.

“The jubilance, confidence and pride expressed by Saudi women driving for the first time in their country, without fear of arrest, brought tears to my eyes,” tweeted activist Hala al-Dosari, while lauding the jailed campaigner­s.

“I’m happy and relieved that... girls in Saudi will live a bit freer than their mothers.”

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 ?? EPA PIC ?? Dina Yousef, 30, driving for the first time in Riyadh yesterday.
EPA PIC Dina Yousef, 30, driving for the first time in Riyadh yesterday.

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