Orlando Sentinel

GUEST EDITORIAL: Saudi women can drive, can’t run lives.

- Los Angeles Times

It’ll be close, but it looks like women will be allowed to drive in Saudi Arabia with some time to spare before the automobile industry converts entirely to self-driving cars.

A royal decree announced Tuesday that women would finally be allowed behind the wheel, heralding a prepostero­usly overdue end to the most high-profile and infamous of the repressive kingdom’s restrictio­ns on women. While there are a few other Middle Eastern and conservati­ve Islamic countries where driving by women is culturally or religiousl­y frowned upon, Saudi Arabia is the last country on the planet that officially prohibited it.

And it’s not a reality yet. Driver’s licenses won’t be issued until June. The government says it will first form a panel to look into implementi­ng the order, then create the infrastruc­ture it claims is necessary to put the order into effect. However, the order seems likely to be carried out.

In recent years, some Saudi women have launched protests of the ban — defying it and, in some cases, getting arrested for doing so. Meanwhile, by allowing women to vote and to run in municipal elections, the Saudi royal family has finally begun to nudge the country if not into the modern era, at least out of the Paleozoic.

As profound as Tuesday’s announceme­nt may be, though, it is a reminder that even more draconian constraint­s on women remain in place in Saudi Arabia.

The worst of these is the country’s oppressive system of male guardiansh­ip. All Saudi women, for their entire lives, must have a male guardian who is a relative — a husband, a father, a brother, even a son — who signs off on all their significan­t decisions. Women must have permission from a guardian to marry, apply for a passport, travel abroad, rent an apartment, file a legal claim and, in some cases, get health care. A woman cannot study abroad on a government scholarshi­p without permission — and then she must be accompanie­d by a male guardian.

Saudi Arabia has perpetuate­d this unconscion­able system even after signing on to the United Nations Convention on the Eliminatio­n of All Forms of Discrimina­tion against Women in 2000. Since then, the Saudi government has pledged to abolish the guardiansh­ip system and enable women to contribute productive­ly to society and to the economy. But this has yet to happen.

There’s no question that the Saudi government has heard and acknowledg­ed the calls for change, not just from its own countrywom­en but also from government­s and human rights advocates around the world. And it is being pushed in the right direction by King Salman and his son, the reformand public-relations-minded Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman. But the government is still swayed by some ultraconse­rvative clerics and still grappling with its society’s more conservati­ve elements.

Truly transformi­ng Saudi Arabia means giving women a license not just to drive, but also to run their own lives without anyone else’s permission. The abolition of the male guardiansh­ip system should be the next announceme­nt we hear from the Saudi government.

 ?? HASAN JAMALI/AP ?? In 2014, a Saudi woman in Riyadh defies ban on driving.
HASAN JAMALI/AP In 2014, a Saudi woman in Riyadh defies ban on driving.

Newspapers in English

Newspapers from United States