Chattanooga Times Free Press

Saudi Arabia allows women to travel without male consent

- BY AYA BATRAWY

DUBAI, United Arab Emirates — Saudi Arabia on Friday published new laws that loosen restrictio­ns on women by allowing all citizens — women and men alike — to apply for a passport and travel freely, ending a long-standing guardiansh­ip policy that had controlled women’s freedom of movement.

The new laws, a potential game-changer for Saudi women’s rights, are to go into effect by the end of the month.

The kingdom’s legal system has long been criticized because it treated adult women as minors, requiring they have a man’s consent to obtain a passport or travel abroad. Often a woman’s male guardian is her father or husband, and in some cases a woman’s son.

The changes were widely celebrated by Saudis on Twitter, with many posting memes showing people dashing to the airport with luggage and others hailing the 33-year-old crown prince believed to be the force behind these moves. But the changes also drew backlash from conservati­ves, who posted clips of senior Saudi clerics in past years arguing in favor of guardiansh­ip laws.

Other changes issued in the decrees allow women to register a marriage, divorce or a child’s birth, and obtain official family documents, which could ease hurdles women faced in obtaining a national identity card and enrolling their children in school.

Women are now also allowed to be legal guardians of their children, a right previously held only by men.

Still in place, however, are rules that require male consent for a woman to leave prison, exit a domestic abuse shelter or marry. Women, unlike men, still cannot pass on citizenshi­p to their children and cannot provide consent for their children to marry.

Under the kingdom’s guardiansh­ip system, women essentiall­y relied on the “good will” and whims of male relatives to determine the course of their lives. There were cases, for example, of young Saudi women whose parents are divorced, but whose father is the legal guardian, being unable to accept scholarshi­ps to study abroad because they did not have permission to travel.

Amnesty Internatio­nal said Friday a lot remains to be done for women’s rights in Saudi Arabia but that the new laws could ease the guardiansh­ip system. Guardiansh­ip laws have “been a stifling system in the daily lives of women in Saudi Arabia,” said Lynn Malouf, Mideast’s research director at Amnesty.

“These reforms really are a testament to the work of the brave activism and the suffering and the ordeals” Saudi women and men fought for in their calls for reform, she added.

Saudi women fleeing domestic abuse and the guardiansh­ip system occasional­ly drew internatio­nal attention to their plight, as 18-year-old Rahaf alQunun did before Canada granted her asylum. The stories of runaway women have created a flurry of negative headlines for the kingdom.

To leave the country, some Saudi women say they had to hack into their father’s phone and change the settings on a government app to allow themselves permission to leave the country. There were calls in Washington for Google and Apple to block access to the app entirely.

In a lengthy study of Saudi male guardiansh­ip laws in 2016, Human Rights Watch criticized it as “system that was ripe for abuse.”

The rules, approved by King Salman and his Cabinet, allow any person 21 and older to travel abroad without prior consent and any citizen to apply for a Saudi passport on their own.

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