New Straits Times

SAUDI WOMEN JOIN ABAYA PROTEST

Campaigner­s wear robes inside out to protest strict dress code

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SAUDI campaigner­s have urged Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman to loosen the conservati­ve kingdom’s strict dress code after women took to social media wearing their abaya inside out in protest.

Women in Saudi Arabia have for decades been required to wear the abaya — a loose, allcoverin­g robe — in public, a dress code strictly enforced by police.

Prince Mohammed said in March that women needed to only dress modestly and were not required to wear abaya. But Saudi women say that in practice nothing has changed, and are demanding more freedom.

“I’ve started wearing my compulsory hijab called abaya (this black robe) turned inside out to express my objection to syariah law violating Saudi women’s freedom to clothe,” tweeted one, referring to the Islamic law that effectivel­y governs the kingdom.

Amani Al-Ahmadi, a Saudi activist with the Euro-Mediterran­ean Human Rights Monitor, called the protest a “brilliant move” that could create real change.

“To see another woman in flipped abaya — it builds solidarity between women and shows that they are not alone. It keeps the conversati­on going and could lead to change,” she said.

“It is another form of dehumanisa­tion for women. It forces women to cover up their bodies in order to fit into society and the role of being inferior to men,” she said by phone from Seattle, where she lives.

Last year, police briefly arrested a Saudi woman who appeared on a Snapchat clip strolling through an empty alleyway wearing a short skirt and a top that exposed her midriff.

Prince Mohammad was praised for promoting women’s rights in the kingdom after he ruled earlier this year they should be allowed to attend mixed public sporting events and drive cars.

But since then, more than a dozen activists, most of them women who had campaigned for greater freedoms, have been detained.

Naureen Shameem, a human rights lawyer who works with the Associatio­n for Women’s Rights in Developmen­t, said she supported the social media campaign.

“It’s time for real change rather than insincere rhetoric about reform,” she said.

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