What could be next for women in Saudi Arabia?

As Saudi women hail the news they will be able to drive from next June, they still face a web of restrictions

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As Saudi women hail the news they will be able to drive from next June, they still face a web of restrictions
As Saudi women hail the news they will be able to drive from next June, they still face a web of restrictions

As Saudi women hail the news they will be able to drive their own cars from next June, they still face a web of restrictions in the conservative Islamic kingdom.

Chief among those is Saudi Arabia’s guardianship system, which requires a woman to get permission from a male family member for some of the most important and even mundane decisions of her life.

That could mean a woman being compelled to ask her younger brother for permission to have a medical procedure or to travel abroad.

Women are generally not allowed to socialise with males outside their immediate families and can be thrown in prison for such an offence.

At the end of their sentence, their male guardian may choose not to sign them out, leaving them in the care of the state.

A hole was poked in that restriction last week, with women allowed to enter a sports stadium in Riyadh for Saudi National Day – in a family section, away from single men.

Women are also restricted in marriage.

In addition to the Islamic restriction found in most Arab countries preventing Muslim women from marrying non-Muslims, Saudi Arabia’s Permanent Committee for Islamic Research and Issuing Fatwas (religious decrees) – a governmental body – has ruled a Sunni woman should not marry a “Shiite man or a communist (atheist)”.

Other rules have been officially lifted, but are still enforced on an ad hoc basis by more zealous members of society.

In May, King Salman ordered government offices to allow women to obtain services without permission from a guardian, but left a caveat for Islamic law to take precedence. More info

By AFP  arabianbusiness.com