The Citizen (Gauteng)

Drive to arrest women

ACTIVISTS: CRACKDOWN BEFORE FEMALES ALLOWED TO GET BEHIND WHEEL

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Seven who campaigned for an end to Saudi kingdom’s male guardiansh­ip system arrested.

Riyadh

Saudi Arabia has arrested at least three more women’s rights activists in a widening crackdown just weeks before a ban on women driving is set to end, internatio­nal rights watchdogs said on Tuesday.

Rights groups last week reported the detention of seven activists, mostly women, who previously campaigned for the right to drive and an end to the kingdom’s male guardiansh­ip system, which requires women to obtain the consent of a male relative for major decisions.

The government later announced that seven people had been arrested for suspicious contacts with foreign entities and offering financial support to “enemies overseas”, and said authoritie­s would identify others involved.

State-backed media labelled those held as traitors and “agents of embassies”, unnerving diplomats in Saudi Arabia, a key US ally, with some likening it to repression in neighbouri­ng Egypt and saying their government­s would privately discuss the matter with Saudi authoritie­s.

“These actions are inconsiste­nt with messages of reform on which Western support for Vision 2030 is based,” one diplomat said, referring to Saudi Arabia’s ambitious social and economic reform agenda. “These actions will have consequenc­es.”

Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman has courted Western allies to support his reforms. Hundreds of billions of dollars of investment­s were discussed during his recent trips to the US and Europe.

US state department spokespers­on Heather Nauert said it supported the Saudi reform agenda but was concerned about the arrests. “We support space for civil society and also free speech. But overall, we’re concerned about it and we’re keeping a close eye on it,” she told reporters in Washington.

Amnesty Internatio­nal told Reuters seven women and two men were being held, in addition to “one unidentifi­ed activist”.

Human Rights Watch reported the same total. One activist said seven women and four men were being held in total.

“Amnesty Internatio­nal is worried about reports of further arrests of individual­s ... and we call on the authoritie­s to reveal the whereabout­s of these individual­s and reveal the charges against them,” said Samah Hadid, Amnesty’s Middle East director of campaigns.

Government spokespeop­le were not immediatel­y available for comment on the latest reports.

Ending a decades-old ban on women driving cars is part of a bid to diversify the economy away from oil and open up Saudis’ cloistered lifestyles.

It has been hailed as proof of a new progressiv­e trend in the conservati­ve Muslim country, but has been accompanie­d by a crackdown on dissent, including dozens of arrests last September that appeared to pave the way for lifting the driving ban.

“It’s an act to stifle any kind of mobilisati­on in Saudi Arabia that comes from the grassroots level,” said Madawi al-Rasheed, visiting professor at the London School of Economics.

“Mohammed bin Salman wants all the credit for any kind of success story; he wants to tell the world that the rights of Saudi women and Saudi citizens come from him.”

Women who previously participat­ed in protests against the driving ban said that two dozen activists had received phone calls instructin­g them not to comment on the decree lifting it. – Reuters

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