The Star Malaysia

Woman’s escape sparks debate

Saudis are blasting the kingdom’s guardiansh­ip system where women need formal permission from male ‘guardians’ – husband, father and other male relatives – to study, get married or even renew their passports.

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A SAUDI teen’s live-tweeted asylum plea has cast a renewed spotlight on women’s rights just months after women won the right to drive, and sparked rare criticism of restrictiv­e “guardiansh­ip” laws – from men.

Rahaf Mohammed al-Qunun, 18, arrived in Thailand last weekend after fleeing what she called an abusive family in the deeply conservati­ve kingdom and staved off deportatio­n after her tweets drew global attention.

Qunun’s impassione­d cry for help set off a media frenzy, prompting angry denunciati­ons and death threats from many in a kingdom where guardiansh­ip laws are still widely supported.

But the incident sparked a rare online debate as several young Saudis – including men – implored authoritie­s to dismantle the guardiansh­ip system.

Seen as a form of gender apartheid, the system means Saudi women are often only as free as their male “guardians” – husband, father and other male relatives – allow them to be. The men in their lives have to give formal permission for the women to study, get married or even renew their passports.

“Guardiansh­ip gives men the ultimate authority over women,” a young Saudi medical student named Bandar said in a video monologue posted on Twitter.

“He can control her, slap her, beat her, do whatever he wants and no (government) agency can stop him.

“This is causing women to dream about living elsewhere, away from where they were born and raised. Why? Because living here suffocates them.”

As tweets by Qunun – now seeking asylum in Canada after being in the care of a UN refugee agency in Thailand – went viral, a new hashtag gained traction in Saudi Arabia: “Drop guardiansh­ip or all of us will migrate.

“Saudi society, in general, has utterly failed to come to terms with the reality that women have an equal desire for self actualisat­ion,” tweeted another Saudi man, Ahmad Nasser al-Shathri.

“The notion that a woman’s innate desire is to be a homemaker is crippling our societal growth.”

The backlash follows a wide-ranging liberalisa­tion drive spearheade­d by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman that is aimed at transformi­ng the conservati­ve petro-state, long criticised for its treatment of women.

His reforms include the much-celebrated decision overturnin­g the world’s only ban on female motorists last June, allowing women to attend soccer games alongside men and take on jobs that once fell outside the narrow confines of tradi- tional gender roles.

Catalysed in large measure by what experts call economic pain owing to a drop in oil prices, the reforms have introduced a series of firsts in the Saudi labour market, where women have a miniscule presence.

In recent months, Saudi media has championed the first woman restaurant chef, first woman news anchor and even the first woman racing driver.

For the first time, women are seen alongside men in music concerts and social gatherings, amid the waning influence of the oncefeared religious police, which strictly segregated the genders.

But while transformi­ng the lives of many women, this reform drive will be cosmetic for many others until the kingdom abolishes a system that gives men arbitrary authority over their female relatives, critics say.

“The social reforms in Saudi Arabia are very much real and they will improve the everyday lives of women,” Bessma Momani, a professor at Canada’s University of Waterloo said.

“But the guardiansh­ip system remains repressive and hinders women’s rights and mobility.”

Women’s empowermen­t is a potential social lightning rod in the deeply traditiona­l society of Saudi Arabia.

Officials close to the government say they are seeking to dismantle the system piece-meal to prevent any backlash from archconser­vatives.

Meanwhile, horror stories regularly surface.

Women inmates are often reported to be stuck in prisons after completing their terms because they were not claimed by their guardians.

One Saudi woman told AFP how she was stuck in limbo, unable to even renew her passport, when her father, her only male guardian, slipped into a coma after an accident.

Many Saudis condemned Qunun for what they described as dishonouri­ng her family. But as she galvanised internatio­nal support in a Twitter-led campaign, many others voiced solidarity – especially after the Saudi charge d’affaires in Bangkok was caught on tape telling Thai authoritie­s they should have confiscate­d Qunun’s cellphone.

“It is challengin­g for the crown prince to completely dismantle guardiansh­ip laws because of religious conservati­ves who have a vested political interest to remain relevant in a changing Saudi Arabia,” said Momani.

“That said, social pressure from young people like Rahaf, who find the reforms glacially slow ... may prove more of a political challenge than the religious conservati­ves.”

 ??  ?? Cosmetic transforma­tion: The kingdom’s reforms, including the much-celebrated overturnin­g of the ban on female motorists last June, will not mean anything if Saudi Arabia does not abolish the system that gives men arbitrary authority over their female relatives. — AP
Cosmetic transforma­tion: The kingdom’s reforms, including the much-celebrated overturnin­g of the ban on female motorists last June, will not mean anything if Saudi Arabia does not abolish the system that gives men arbitrary authority over their female relatives. — AP

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