The National - News

We see footprints left by reformers’ many small steps

- NASER AL WASMI

The decision to allow Saudi women to drive is one of the most radical social and economic reforms to be introduced in the kingdom’s 87-year history.

The royal decree is part of a larger set of reforms that have granted women more economic independen­ce and educationa­l developmen­t.

Lina Al Maeena, a member of the Shura Council, said the details of the decision are still to be debated but should be announced “within a month to enable women to drive in around 10 months”. She said a committee of officials from the interior and labour ministry will be responsibl­e for those details.

Saudi Arabia still lags far behind other Gulf nations when it comes to women’s rights, and it remains to be seen how much freedom they will be given on the roads.

Some Saudi observers said the initial step may only permit women to drive for official reasons, falling short of equal rights to men.

Regardless, the decision was welcomed by Saudi women and some men who said allowing women to drive was a big move towards gender equality and would provide a boost to the Saudi economy.

“It’s a series of decisions to enable women to work alongside their male counterpar­ts to develop the country,” Ms Al Maeena said.

She said millions of Saudi riyals would be saved. Saudis employ around 1.38 million drivers at a cost of 3 billion riyals a month, but allowing women to drive would mean that about half a million would no longer be required.

The lifting of the ban is about “empowering women in line with Vision 2030, increasing women’s participat­ion in the workforce from 22 per cent to 30 per cent,” Ms Al Maeena said.

Saudi Arabia’s Vision 2030 is the brainchild of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman, and an attempt to address a future in which oil plays less of a role in the kingdom’s economy.

Providing women with more rights could be Saudi Arabia’s new economic fuel, as a generation of well-educated women intent on a role in society beyond bearing children will provide a much-needed injection into the workforce.

This sudden mobilisati­on of a huge section of the Saudi population will provide a dream scenario for growth. Those entering the workforce have benefited from the reformist policies of kings aimed at empowering women.

By Saudi Arabian standards, King Abdullah, who died in January 2015, was a reformist, implementi­ng policies to raise the status of women. He was the first king to champion the idea that women had the right to higher education.

He also appointed 30 women to the Shura Council and issued a decree allowing women to participat­e as voters and candidates in municipal elections.

The end of the driving ban “definitely isn’t the first step,” said Jane Kinninmont, deputy head and senior research fellow at Chatham House’s Middle East and North Africa programme.

“Many changes were made under King Abdullah. Among the important changes was the massive expansion of university education for women, including the scholarshi­p system.

“The changes in the labour law and regulation­s over the past decade have also enabled educated women to play more of a role in the economy, thanks to a series of ministers, including the late Ghazi Al Gosaibi.”

After Abdullah’s death, King Salman, on ascending to the throne, said he would continue to push for reform on women’s rights.

Saudi Arabia’s conservati­ves and clerics took to social media to express their condemnati­on of the decision.

The most tweeted hashtag on the subject, and the fourth globally yesterday, translated to “the people reject the rule of women”.

The decision to allow women to drive comes as the Shura Council moves to curb the authority of the ultra-conservati­ve and often-criticised religious police.

This month, the council announced it would vote on a proposal for the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice, as they are known, to be absorbed into the ministry of Islamic affairs.

In April last year, the government stripped the religious police of the power of arrest.

“When King Abdullah wanted to rein in the power of the clerics, he usually did it through subtle, quiet steps, such as a series of long-term judicial reforms that gradually reduced their powers in the justice system,” said Ms Kinninmont.

“By contrast, Mohammed bin Salman is making a more overt move to signal that Saudi Arabia is changing.”

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