Saturday Star

Election law turmoil

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MADAGASCAR defence minister General Beni Xavier Rasolofoni­rina has threatened to deploy security forces if the government and opposition failed to resolve a crisis sparked by controvers­ial election laws, AFP reported. His warning came after crunch talks failed to defuse the dispute. Madagascar has been rocked by violent protests since April 21 that initially sought to oppose new laws that the opposition said were crafted to bar their candidates from participat­ing in elections expected this year. – African News Agency (ANA) BEIRUT: An image on the cover of Vogue Arabia of a Saudi princess behind the wheel of a red convertibl­e has sparked anger in the conservati­ve kingdom after the jailing of activists campaignin­g for women to be allowed to drive.

Nearly a dozen prominent activists were arrested last month, weeks before the ban on women driving was due to be lifted. Most were women who had campaigned for years for the reforms now being implemente­d.

Supporters of the activists took to social media to accuse the publishers of Vogue Arabia of insensitiv­ity over the cover image of Princess Hayfa bint Abdullah al-saud.

“Tell Voguearabi­a when it falsely presents royal princesses as champions of #Saudiwomen­driving, real women champions are at imminent risk,” tweeted Fadi al-qadi, whose handle describes him as a human rights commentato­r.

“A princess on the cover of Vogue Arabia to celebrate lifting the ban while the women driving activists are in jail for treason,” tweeted another with the handle Hala_aldosari.

Some shared doctored versions of the cover swapping the face of Princess Hayfa with that of Loujain al-hathloul, one of the detained activists.

The decision to lift a decades-old ban on women driving cars has been hailed as proof of a new progressiv­e trend in Saudi Arabia.

But the activists’ arrests have raised concerns from campaigner­s and the UN over Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s approach to reforms. – Reuters

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