Calgary Herald

Flight ups the ante on rights

- Analysis from Ottawa MIKE BLANCHFIEL­D

Canada’s acceptance of a Saudi Arabian teenager seeking asylum is sparking debate within that country about loosening laws restrictin­g women’s freedom, but also a backlash that could initially repress more women, analysts say.

Experts say a slow march to reforming Saudi Arabia’s controvers­ial guardiansh­ip laws that give men control over women’s lives could also be impeded by conservati­ve families that could curtail their daughters’ freedom even more in light of 18-yearold Rahaf Mohammed Alqunun’s high-profile dash to freedom.

“There has always been a lot of support to remove the guardiansh­ip laws from within,” said Bessma Momani, a Middle East expert at the University of Waterloo and Balsillie School of Internatio­nal Affairs.

“So the two are going to happen at the same time — both domestic repression of women who may be less able to travel now, and also the case of more pressure internally to loosen the guardiansh­ip laws.”

Alqunun won global attention last week when she fled her family while visiting Kuwait and flew to Bangkok.

She barricaded herself in an airport hotel and launched a Twitter campaign outlining allegation­s of abuse against her relatives. Her family has denied the accusation­s. She arrived in Toronto on Saturday after Canada agreed to a UN request to accept her as a refugee, and is expected to address the media on Tuesday.

So far, Canada’s reaction has not produced a formal response from the Saudi government. Canada’s relations with Saudi Arabia hit a new low in August. Saudi Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman expelled Canada’s ambassador and withdrew his own envoy after Foreign Affairs Minister Chrystia Freeland used Twitter to call for the release of women’s rights activists who had been arrested in Saudi Arabia.

Dennis Horak, Canada’s expelled ambassador, said “some conservati­ve families who have very strong controls over their daughters will likely be very concerned about the example that has been set.”

But Horak said he has seen signs that there is room for a public discussion in an otherwise repressive Saudi political culture over the merits of guardiansh­ip, which subjects women to the control of men in whole host of areas including applying for a passport, travelling and getting married.

During the height of last week’s standoff in Bangkok, a Saudi newspaper published an opinion column that openly advocated for guardiansh­ip to be abolished.

“Male guardiansh­ip over women in Saudi Arabia — or anywhere in the world — is wrong and discrimina­tory, and all forms of this outdated practice should be abolished,” wrote Faisal J. Abbas, editorin-chief of Arab News.

Horak said he’s sure the article got the “green light” from Saudi leadership before it was published.

However, the head of the country’s state-controlled human rights commission was also quoted in Saudi media on the weekend accusing Canada of meddling in the internal affairs of Alqunun’s family with the intent of vilifying Saudi Arabia, Horak noted.

Mufleh Al-Qahtani, the head of the Saudi National Society for Human Rights, said Canada’s action was “an attack on the rights of the families of these girls, who are severely harmed by the defamation following their daughters’ action that pushes them into the unknown.”

Horak, Momani and Thomas Juneau, a University of Ottawa Mideast expert, said the modest reforms enacted by the Saudi Crown Prince represente­d some progress despite his despotic tendencies, which including imprisonin­g a record number of political dissenters.

“He is not a democrat. He is not going to make women equal to men — but there is a lot that he is doing to try to remove some of the constraint­s on women in Saudi Arabia. It shouldn’t be exaggerate­d but it shouldn’t be ignored,” said Juneau.

That includes removing a ban on women drivers and allowing them greater access to jobs, he added.

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