Marysville Appeal-Democrat

Saudi women take the wheel as driving ban ends

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Maha Aqeel joined 14 other women at a friend’s place Saturday night in their hometown of Jeddah. A bit before midnight, they piled into five cars, waiting for the night to slide into Sunday. Once it did, Aqeel said, the women “were ready.”

Switching drivers every five minutes or so, their convoy made its way through the city’s crowded thoroughfa­res before heading to Jeddah’s seaside boulevard. There they joined the crowds that had come to mark the lifting of the ban on women driving, a burdensome edict and longstandi­ng public relations black eye for Saudi Arabia.

“I couldn’t believe it finally happened, that we could drive in our land,” said Aqeel, a journalist and writer. “We just got the feel of it, but even being on the road for five minutes was great.”

It was another in the series of once unthinkabl­e changes characteri­zing the year since Prince Mohammad bin Salman, the son of Saudi Arabia’s ruler, elbowed his way into the position of crown prince.

In that time, his stature has grown as the de facto leader of the country, one armed with an ambitious plan, called Vision 2030, to end Saudi Arabia’s dependence on oil.

Yet even as he drives change, his year in power has been characteri­zed by criticism that he tunes out other voices for reform.

“Beside this openness, there has been a closing off of any independen­t opinions,” said Jamal Khashoggi, a Saudi journalist in self-imposed exile in Washington. “What is being said to all of us is, ‘You just have to take what I give you,’ and, ‘Leave me to lead alone.’”

Yet Sunday seemed a moment of liberation to many. Walaa Abou Najem, 30, drives her car for the first time through the capital’s streets, accompanie­d by her husband Ammar Akelah, at the first minutes of Sunday.

Aqeel and others took to social media, posting selfies and videos of their first forays on the road under hashtags such as #Saudiwomen­driving, while traffic police in the Saudi capital Riyadh distribute­d pink rose bouquets. (Attached was a card telling them “May safety accompany you.”)

Saudi Instagram user Mashail Gammas uploaded a clip of herself driving as animations of flowers fall on the screen, with Nina Simone’s “Feeling Good” playing in the background.

“Congratula­tions to us all, congratula­tions for this historic day,” she wrote.

Others, like Deema Farsi, a Twitter user in Jeddah, took her children for a ride through the city Sunday morning.

“On the first day behind the wheel in #Saudi, I took my kids for a ride in #Jeddah and winked at my 13year old son: ‘I got to do that before you’,” she wrote on Twitter. “The woman now has ... taken her freedom . ... Saudi has entered the 21st century.”

The lifting of the ban marks the end of a decadeslon­g

policy (and unwritten law) that had made Saudi Arabia a pariah state for its treatment of women and an easy target for ridicule for its clerics’ often comical justificat­ions for the edict. (One religious figure insisted that women possess no more than half a brain, and half of that “is occupied by shopping,” leaving her with only a quarter of a brain to drive. Another said it would have adverse clinical effects on women’s ovaries.)

But it was also an economic burden on the many Saudi families that couldn’t afford the expense of chauffeurs, even as it made conditions more difficult for women to join the workforce.

Although ride-sharing apps like Uber and Careem (a local competitor) gave women more flexibilit­y, many had to forgo education, work or even basic errands like grocery shopping.

The move is expected to save families more than $5,000 a year as women no longer have to rely on chauffeurs or ride-sharing drivers, said Faisal Ghweinem, a Saudi investor, in an interview with the Okaz local

daily newspaper.

Meanwhile, a study by Price Waterhouse Coopers estimates 3 million new drivers will enter the market by 2020, with anywhere from 4 million to 6 million more to follow.

Lifting the ban is expected to help create badly needed new job opportunit­ies for women, such as driving instructor­s or police officers. (Vision 2030 calls for female labor to grow from its 2017 share of 20.9 percent of the workforce to 33.3 percent, according to Saudi Arabia’s General Authority for Statistics.)

And the auto industry has been eager to cash in since the royal court announced 10 months ago that it would lift the ban.

In recent weeks, brands like Nissan and Ford seeded their social media accounts with videos aimed at drawing Saudi women to the showroom.

All have fed into a festive atmosphere in major cities around the country, nurtured by a steady drip of government-arranged events, such as training with driving simulators and showroom visits.

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The Los Angeles Times (TNS)

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