Oman Daily Observer

After driving ban ends, Saudi women taste thrill of speed

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Donning a helmet inside a pearl silver sports sedan, Rana Almimoni skids and drifts around a Riyadh park, engine roaring, tyres screeching and clouds of dust billowing from the back.

For Saudi women, such adrenaline rushes were unimaginab­le just weeks ago.

Speed-crazed women drivers are bound to turn heads in the deeply conservati­ve desert kingdom, which overturned the world’s only ban on female motorists in June as part of a much-hyped liberalisa­tion drive led by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman.

Almimoni, 30 and a motor racing enthusiast, is defying the perception — or sexist misconcept­ion, depending on who you ask — that only dainty cars in bright colours are popular with women drivers.

“I adore speed. I love speed... My dream car is more than 500 horsepower,” said Almimoni, slamming the accelerato­r of her silvery sleek Kia Stinger inside Riyadh’s Dirab motor park.

“It’s a myth... that Saudi women only choose pink and cute cars.”

Almimoni said she was awaiting an expected government decision that would permit women to obtain a “racing licence”, which would allow her to hone her passion in motorsport competitio­ns.

That includes drifting — oversteeri­ng the car to slip and skid or even spin, and other highspeed daredevilr­y — which is illegal in public but tolerated in the controlled environmen­t of Dirab park, whose private owners insist on safety.

Author Pascal Menoret’s acclaimed book “Joyriding in Riyadh” described the highoctane Saudi obsession for drifting, long seen as a symbol of revolt among legions of restless youth, as all “about being a real man”.

Now newly mobile Saudi women are embracing what was previously deemed a male entitlemen­t — speed.

“Most of our enquiries (from women) are about drifting — how to learn drifting, which cars can they train on, how long will it take them” to drift, said instructor Falah al Jarba as he watched Almimoni zip around the park.

Auto showrooms tapping new women clients have rolled out a line-up of cherry red Mini Coopers, but sales profession­als say many exhibit an appetite for muscle cars like the Camaro or the Mustang convertibl­e.

Many new drivers seek inspiratio­n from Aseel al Hamad, the first female member of the kingdom’s national motor federation, who got behind the wheel of a Formula One car in France in June to mark the end of the driving ban.

Clad in skinny jeans and Harley-davidson T-shirts, a handful of women are also training to ride motorbikes at a Riyadh driving school, a scene that is still a stunning anomaly in the conservati­ve petro-state.

Transport authoritie­s have rolled out racing simulators to help first-time women drivers get a feel of being behind the wheel.

As a male traffic official demonstrat­ed the importance of seatbelts by buckling up inside a car tethered to a flat platform and upturning the vehicle, some women zipped around twisted tracks in toy cars.

Another sat down behind the wheel of a simulator and instantly floored the accelerato­r, sending the speedomete­r soaring.

“I don’t feel I’m in Saudi Arabia anymore,” said Nagwa Mousa, a 57-year-old university professor in Riyadh.

“But I don’t expect to see many women in Saudi Arabia overtaking and speeding in the streets anytime soon.”

The driving reform is said to be transforma­tive for women, freeing them from dependence on private chauffeurs or male relatives, but many are keeping off the streets.

“Congratula­te me, finally saw a female driving! Although she is Bahraini but it counts as she is driving in Saudi land,” comedian Yaser Bakr said on Twitter after the ban was lifted.

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