USA TODAY International Edition

Women in Saudi Arabia gear up to drive legally

Restrictiv­e nation finally lets them behind wheel

- Jacob Wirtschaft­er and Diana Rifai

A male-only driving population killed more than 9,000 people in 2016, mainly because of speeding.

JEDDAH, Saudi Arabia – Women in this strict Muslim country finally get to sit behind the wheel and legally drive for the first time starting Sunday. One side benefit: This milestone could decrease the nation’s exorbitant traffic fatalities.

“Saudi Arabia has one of the highest accident rates in the whole world, and that’s why safe driving is so important to us,” said Haifa Jamalallai­l, president of Effat University, whose 17-year-old daughter died in a crash on a Saudi highway. “Statistics show that women are generally safer and more defensive drivers than men.”

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman announced last fall that Saudi Arabia would become the last country in the world to allow women to drive.

Soon after, the Saudi interior minister, Prince Abdulaziz bin Saud, said lifting the driving ban on women would reduce the number of accidents in this conservati­ve country that has one of the worst car-crash mortality rates in the world.

“Women driving cars will transform traffic safety. It will reduce human and economic losses caused by accidents,” he said.

Saudi Arabia has tried reducing speed limits, investing in more traffic signals and roadside speed-warning signs, and toughening penalties for moving violations. These changes helped Saudi Arabia drop from its 2010 record for the world’s highest death toll from road accidents to 34th place in 2017.

Still, a male-only driving population killed more than 9,000 people in 2016, mainly because of speeding, according to the latest government statistics.

Saudi Arabian officials say allowing women to drive could also boost female employment and revitalize auto sales, which have declined in part from falling oil prices the past few years.

“Issuing licenses for 2 to 3 million women also empowers them to join the workforce. And the disconnect between job opportunit­ies and access is about to end,” said Hala Kudwah, a lead consultant at Pricewater­houseCoope­rs in Saudi Arabia, which released a study in March forecastin­g the economic benefits of female drivers.

The move could also boost U.S. automakers like Ford, which is one of the top five brands in Saudi Arabia.

“Features are tailored to markets, and in Saudi Arabia the entire population of drivers had been male,” said Crystal Worthem, Ford’s Middle East and Africa marketing director. “That is changing as women start driving, and you will see different ... trends and features – a little bit less about power and a little more about driver assistance technology, comfort and, most importantl­y, safety.”

Private driving schools in the kingSome dom were already reporting a surge of prospectiv­e female students, while women-only universiti­es such as Effat in Jeddah offered driver’s ed courses. Ford has worked with administra­tors to get students ready for the road through its Driving Skills for Life course.

Effat’s Jamalallai­l said she is particular­ly invested in the road safety aspect of the Ford program because of her daughter’s death.

“Our goal is that our students change the culture on the roads by practicing safe driving,” she said.

Students practice on a campus parking lot wearing specially designed “fatal vision” goggles that show the effects of fatigue on driving performanc­e and simulate conditions of night driving.

“The frightenin­g thing is that any mistake behind the wheel might cause the loss of a soul,” said Dima Najm, 21, a film major at Effat University and graduate of Ford’s hands-on course. “Some of my sisters already have an internatio­nal license, so I’m proud to be first in the family with a Saudi one.”

future drivers are excited about finally getting behind the wheel.

“I’m not scared about my own handling of the car,” said Sarah Ghouth, 22, an architectu­re major. “The fear is more about risky drivers on the roads.”

She has had driver training at the university, and her brothers take her to practice in the desert.

“They are actually happy to teach me because it means in a few weeks they won’t have to be driving me around anymore. My dad will be happy to see less money go to ride app companies,” Ghouth said.

Many women here say they are relieved they no longer will have to rely on a ride-hailing service such as Uber or need to ask their fathers or brothers to take them shopping or to work.

And getting behind the wheel has ignited a sense of independen­ce in a culture laden with gender-based restrictio­ns and taboos.

“Since we finally achieved this, I think we can go anywhere and achieve anything,” Najm said.

 ??  ?? A Saudi woman practices reversing a car in Riyadh in April ahead of the lifting of a ban on female drivers in the restrictiv­e Middle Eastern nation, the world’s last to allow women behind the wheel. YOUSEF DOUBISI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES
A Saudi woman practices reversing a car in Riyadh in April ahead of the lifting of a ban on female drivers in the restrictiv­e Middle Eastern nation, the world’s last to allow women behind the wheel. YOUSEF DOUBISI/AFP/GETTY IMAGES

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