Santa Fe New Mexican

Saudi Arabia issues driver’s licenses to first 10 women

- By Ben Hubbard

BEIRUT — Saudi Arabia issued driver’s licenses to 10 women on Monday, a historic move that came 20 days before the government had planned to lift its long-standing ban on women driving.

The surprise announceme­nt followed the detention of a number of Saudis who had campaigned for women’s right to drive. Some are still being held and have been accused of grave crimes that the government has said sought to “undermine the security and stability of the kingdom.”

The lifting of the driving ban was championed by Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, a son of the Saudi king. Mohammed has ordered a number of changes that seek to diversify the kingdom’s oil-dependent economy and improve life for Saudis.

Many Saudis have applauded what they say are efforts to make life in their ultraconse­rvative kingdom more like life elsewhere. But Mohammed’s critics say the changes have come with a heavy dose of authoritar­ianism that has further restricted Saudis’ already limited margins for expression.

Along with opening commercial movie theaters and promoting women’s employment, Mohammed has arrested scores of clerics, businessme­n and some of his own royal relatives. Dozens of members of the royal family and wealthy businessme­n were locked in the Riyadh Ritz-Carlton last year, accused of corruption and pressed to turn over many of their assets to the government.

It was not immediatel­y clear why the 10 women received their driver’s licenses Monday, 20 days before the official lifting of the ban, or whether that meant that the driving ban had in effect been lifted early.

A government press office announced the news and provided quotations from the women along with photograph­s of them and their new licenses.

A short video clip of the first of the women being handed her license from a uniformed traffic official was widely shared on social media.

One of the women posted a photo of her new license on Twitter with a blue sky behind it.

“The dream became a reality,” the woman, Ahlam al-Thunayan, wrote, thanking both King Salman and Mohammed.

The announceme­nt said 2,000 more Saudi women could receive their licenses next week, but it provided no details about who they were or where the licenses would be issued.

 ?? SAUDI INFORMATIO­N MINISTRY VIA AP ?? Esraa Albuti, an executive director at Ernst & Young, displays her driver’s license Monday at the General Department of Traffic in Riyadh, Saudia Arabia.
SAUDI INFORMATIO­N MINISTRY VIA AP Esraa Albuti, an executive director at Ernst & Young, displays her driver’s license Monday at the General Department of Traffic in Riyadh, Saudia Arabia.

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