Khaleej Times

Saudi women under scanner of driving schools, car dealers

- Reuters

beirut — Ride-sharing apps, carmakers, and driving schools are targeting their newest market — Saudi Arabian women — wasting no time after the kingdom lifted its ban on women drivers last month.

Ride-hailing service, Uber, told the Thomson Reuters Foundation on Monday it was aiming to recruit female training drivers for Saudi women who want to work for Uber by the end of the year.

The company will open its first ever “female partner support centre” to be on hand to support women drivers.

“We want to do a dedicated centre for females who want to be on the platform as drivers in Saudi Arabia,” Shaden Abdellatif, Uber spokeswoma­n for the Middle East and North Africa, said by phone from Cairo. In a royal decree issued on September 26, the Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques, King Salman bin Abdulaziz, ordered an end by next year to the ban on women drivers.

The decision is expected to push women into the workforce and boost car sales. Uber said it wanted to be a part of the “progressiv­e changes”.

“Your car can essentiall­y be your small business (which) will be quite appealing for women there - it’s that idea of part-time work opportunit­y,” said Abdellatif.

Carmakers were also quick to welcome the royal decree — that ordered new rules allowing women to drive be drawn up within 30 days and implemente­d by June 2018, removing a stain on Saudi Arabia’s image as the only country banning women from the wheel.

“Congratula­tions to all Saudi women who will now be able to drive,” Nissan said in a Twitter post depicting a license plate bearing the registrati­on “2018 GRL”. BMW, whose X5 SUV is the group’s Middle East top-seller, also saluted the initiative. The arrival of women drivers could lift Saudi car sales by 15-20 per cent annually, leading forecaster LMC Automotive predicts, as the kingdom’s “car density” of 220 vehicles per 1,000 adults rises to about 300 in 2025.—

 ?? AP file ?? A woman drives a car on a highway in Riyadh. —
AP file A woman drives a car on a highway in Riyadh. —

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