Toronto Star

Saudi ban on female drivers could soften — for some

- ABDULLAH AL-SHIHRI THE ASSOCIATED PRESS

RIYADH, SAUDI ARABIA— Saudi Arabia’s royal-appointed advisory council recommende­d to the government for the first time that the kingdom’s blanket ban on women driving be lifted, but with conditions: Only women over 30 will be allowed behind the wheel and only until 8 p.m. each day, and no makeup allowed while driving, a council member said Friday.

The Shura Council’s recommenda­tions are not obligatory on the government. But simply making the recommenda­tion was a startling shift after years of the kingdom staunchly rejecting any review of the ban.

There have been small but increasing­ly bold protests by women who took to their cars over the past year. The driving ban, which is unique in the world, is imposed because the kingdom’s ultraconse­rvative Muslim clerics say “licentious­ness” will spread if women drive.

The council member told The Associated Press that the Shura Council made the recommenda­tions in a secret, closed session held in the past month. The member spoke on condition of anonymity because the recommenda­tions had not been made public.

Under the recommenda­tions, only women over 30 would be allowed to drive and they would need permission from a male guardian to do so. They would be allowed to drive from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Saturday through Wednesday and noon to 8 p.m. on Thursday and Friday, the weekend in the kingdom.

The conditions also require that a woman driver wear conservati­ve dress and no makeup, the official said. Within cities, they can drive without a male guardian in the car, but outside of cities, a male is required to be present.

The council said a “female traffic department” will have to be created so that a woman officer would deal with female drivers if their cars broke down or faced assaults, the council member said.

The 150-member Shura Council is appointed by the king, drawing on various sectors of society to act as the closest thing to a parliament in the kingdom, though it has no legislativ­e powers. King Abdullah appointed women to it for the first time, and now there are 30 women members.

The driving ban has long forced families to hire live-in drivers for women. Women who can’t afford the $300 to $400 a month for a driver must rely on male relatives to drive them.

The ban is part of the general restrictio­ns imposed on women based on strict interpreta­tion of Islamic sharia law. Genders are strictly segregated, and women are required to wear a head scarf and loose, black robes in public.

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