'Saudi Arabia lifts travel restriction on its women'; 'Saudi Arabia Extends New Rights to Women in Blow to Oppressive System'

1 view
Skip to first unread message

Jai Sen

unread,
Aug 3, 2019, 2:46:29 PM8/3/19
to Post WSMDiscuss, Post Social Movements Riseup, Post Crisis of Civilisation and Alternative Paradigms, Post Debate, Post Activism News Network, JS

Saturday, August 3, 2019

Saudi Arabia in movement…, Women in movement…, Freedoms in movement…

[On the face of things, and at one level, this is without doubt good news; and notwithstanding the conditions have made this happen.  But still… : If only there wasn’t that feeling that this is merely a tactical move, a cosmetic move, and one that is seriously undermined by the conditions that still exist for the women activists (and perhaps others, who have acted in solidarity ?) in Saudi Arabia who remain in jail… and where the underlying feudal and patriarchal social order remains firmly intact.  It is (always) men that give, it is (always) men that taketh away :

“It was not clear why the new regulations were announced now, but the news was [is] likely to draw some attention [away] from the mounting foreign criticism of Saudi Arabia’s human rights record.

“The murder of Mr. Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul last year drew global condemnation. Saudi forces are bogged down and accused of war crimes in Yemen, leading to growing calls by American lawmakers to cut support for the Saudi war effort. And waves of arrests have scooped up clerics, intellectuals, royals, businessmen and activists who had campaigned for an end to the guardianship system.”



Saudi Arabia lifts travel restriction on its women

Jubilation erupts on social media as landmark reform ends male 'guardianship' on women travelling abroad.

https://www.aljazeera.com/news/2019/08/saudi-arabia-lifts-travel-restriction-women-190802010707868.html

Dalia Yashar is one of the first Saudi students to register to become a commercial pilot [Hamad Mohammed/Reuters]
Dalia Yashar is one of the first Saudi students to register to become a commercial pilot [Hamad Mohammed/Reuters]

Saudi Arabia will allow women to travel abroad without approval from a male "guardian", the government has announced, ending a restriction that drew international censure and prompted extreme attempts to flee the kingdom.

The decree announced on Friday comes after high-profile attempts by women to escape their guardians, despite a string of reforms including an historic decree last year that overturned the world's only ban on female motorists.

Reema Bandar Al-Saud, Saudi Arabia's first female ambassador to the United States, also confirmed the report in a social media post.

"These new regulations are history in the making. They call for the equal engagement of women and men in our society," she said. "These developments have been a long time coming."

It was unclear when the order will take effect.

If implemented, the landmark reform ends the long-standing guardianship system that renders adult women as legal minors and allows their guardians - husband, father and other male relatives - to exercise arbitrary authority over them.

"A passport will be granted to any Saudi national who submits an application," said a government ruling published in the official gazette, Umm Al-Qura.

The regulation effectively allows women over the age of 21 to obtain passports and leave the country without their guardian's permission, the pro-government Okaz newspaper and other local media reported, citing senior authorities.

Women in the kingdom have long required permission from their male guardians to marry, renew their passports or exit the country.

The reform grants women greater autonomy and mobility, the pro-government Saudi Gazette newspaper said, hailing the decision as "one giant leap for Saudi women".

The decision was met with jubilation on social media, with the hashtag "No guardianship over women travel" gaining traction and many posting humorous memes of women fleeing with suitcases and being chased by men.

"Some women's dreams were aborted due to inability to leave the country for whatever reason ... to study abroad, a work opportunity, or even flee if so desired," Saudi businesswoman Muna Abu Sulayman said on Twitter.

Saudi Women
The changes also grant Saudi women the right to officially register childbirth, marriage or divorce and to be recognised as a guardian to children who are minors [File: Zohra Bensemra/Reuters]

"This change means women are in a way in full control of their legal destiny."

The changes also grant Saudi women what has long been a male entitlement - the right to officially register childbirth, marriage or divorce and to be recognised as a guardian to children who are minors.

A hashtag calling for marriage without a guardian's consent was also among the top trending along with a hashtag thanking the crown prince and another touting the new travel rules.

Crackdown and reform

The reform comes as Saudi Arabia faces heightened international scrutiny over its human rights record, including an ongoing trial of women activists who have long demanded that the guardianship system be dismantled.

That includes Loujain AlHathloul, a prominent rights activist who marked her 30th birthday this week in a Saudi prison, campaigners said.

Saudi women's rights activist Loujain al-Hathloul to stand trial

Alongside a sweeping crackdown on dissent, Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman - the kingdom's de facto ruler - spearheads a wide-ranging liberalisation drive that is aimed at transforming the conservative petrostate, long criticised for its treatment of women.

His reforms include the decision allowing women to drive in June last year, allowing women to attend football games alongside men and take on jobs that once fell outside the narrow confines of traditional gender roles.

But while transforming the lives of many women, critics said the reforms will be cosmetic for many others until the kingdom abolishes the guardianship system.

Some have undertaken perilous attempts to escape overseas despite the reforms.

They include 18-year-old Rahaf al-Qunun or also known as Rahaf Mohammed, whose live-tweeting of a plea for asylum from a Bangkok hotel in January after she fled her Saudi family, drew global attention.

Later, two Saudi sisters who sought sanctuary in Hong Kong from what they called family abuse were allowed passage to a third country that was not named for their safety.

And subsequently, two other Saudi sisters fled to Georgia.

The latest reform, which weakens but does not completely dismantle the guardianship system, could lead to family clashes in the deeply patriarchal society, observers warn.

Saudi officials have expressed commitment to fighting guardianship abuse, but have warned the system can only be dismantled piecemeal to prevent a backlash from arch-conservatives.

In a one-off case last year, a Saudi court ruled in favour of a 24-year-old woman who challenged her father's decision to not let her have a passport. But until Thursday's ruling, she would have still required his permission to travel.



Saudi Arabia Extends New Rights to Women in Blow to Oppressive System

ImageBuraydah train station in Saudi Arabia on Friday. Saudi women will be allowed to obtain passports, travel and work without a male relative’s permission.
CreditCreditTasneem Alsultan for The New York Times

BEIRUT, Lebanon — Some Saudi women joked about rushing to the airport — alone. Others breathed a sigh of relief that the men in their lives — whether fathers, brothers or husbands — could no longer dictate their movements. Social media crackled with ecstatic posts: memes of women praising the crown prince and ululating in celebration.

The jubilation came Friday as Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman extended a passel of new rights to women: the right to travel without a male relative’s permission, to receive equal treatment in the workplace and to obtain family documents from the government. Together, they were a significant blow against a system that has long treated women as second-class citizens.

“This change means women are in a way in full control of their legal destiny,” Muna AbuSulayman, a well-known Saudi media personality, wrote on Twitter. She said she was so elated that she could not sleep.

The new regulations were the most significant weakening yet of Saudi Arabia’s so-called guardianship system, a longstanding tangle of laws, regulations and social customs that subjected many women’s rights to the whims of their male relatives. Coming after new regulations allowing women to drive and attend entertainment and sporting events, the changes have the potential to be a game changer, not only for women but for Saudi society.

“It is a great breakthrough,” Hoda al-Helaissi, a member of the kingdom’s advisory Shura Council, said on Friday. “It was bound to happen, but these changes are always done at a time when the people are more apt to accept the changes, otherwise they will fail.”

The advances for women are a key piece of Prince Mohammed’s vision for reforming the kingdom by diversifying the economy and loosening social restrictions. Since his father ascended the throne in 2015, Prince Mohammed, the kingdom’s day-to-day ruler, has won plaudits for taming the kingdom’s religious police, allowing movie theaters and music concerts, and lifting the ban on women driving.

ImageSince his father, King Salman, right, ascended to the throne in 2015, Prince Mohammed has begun initiatives aimed at diversifying the economy, confronting Iran and loosening the kingdom’s social restrictions.
CreditTasneem Alsultan for The New York Times

But along with that social opening have come riskier moves that have raised questions about his brash leadership style, including his catastrophic war in Yemen, the jailing of dissidents at home, and the effort to silence them abroad, including the killing of the journalist Jamal Khashoggi.

Even as Prince Mohammed opened new doors for Saudi women, critics pointed out, some women who had campaigned for those rights remained in jail or on trial for their activism.

At least some of the changes to the guardianship laws are to take effect by the end of the month, the government said in a statement. But they will likely take longer to flow through the Saudi bureaucracy to individual households, and some women said they would only be truly equal once they received other rights they still lack, such as the ability to marry or live on their own without a male relative’s permission.

Even so, the changes were pivotal.

“These new regulations are history in the making,” Princess Reema bint Bandar al-Saud, the kingdom’s ambassador to the United States and Saudi Arabia’s first female ambassador, wrote on Twitter. “They call for the equal engagement of women and men in our society.”

She added: “Our leadership has proved its unequivocal commitment to gender equality.”

In recent years, Prince Mohammed has loosened restrictions on women’s dress and pushed for more women to enter the work force, billing the social opening as essential to build the insular Islamic kingdom’s economy.

It was not clear why the new regulations were announced now, but the news was likely to draw some attention from the mounting foreign criticism of Saudi Arabia’s human rights record.

The murder of Mr. Khashoggi in the Saudi consulate in Istanbul last year drew global condemnation. Saudi forces are bogged down and accused of war crimes in Yemen, leading to growing calls by American lawmakers to cut support for the Saudi war effort. And waves of arrests have scooped up clerics, intellectuals, royals, businessmen and activists who had campaigned for an end to the guardianship system.

Image
Saudi women driving in Dammam in 2018. The year before, Saudi Arabia announced that it would allow women behind the wheel.
CreditTasneem Alsultan for The New York Times

A number of young Saudi women have fled abroad in recent years, seeking refuge from abusive family members and a legal system they do not trust to protect them, drawing unwanted attention to the guardianship system.

The arrests, and the wider intolerance of dissent under Prince Mohammed, made it hard to fully gauge public reaction to the changes, but many Saudi women cheered them as liberating.

Ms. al-Helaissi, the Shura Council member, said she did not expect the changes to have a great immediate effect on most families, but said the biggest beneficiaries would be divorced or widowed women who could now run their family affairs more easily.

The regulations allowing women to register births, marriages and divorces will make an enormous difference for women who are separated from their husbands and those who need to navigate the bureaucracy on behalf of their children, said Adam Coogle, a Saudi expert at Human Rights Watch.

In the past, he said, separated women have reported being punished or extorted by husbands who would not help obtain birth certificates or other bureaucratic records for children.

The ban on employment discrimination will also prevent private employers from telling women that they need a guardian’s permission to be hired, a common practice even though current law does not require women to obtain consent to work.

The new regulations are unlikely to produce instant changes across Saudi society, especially in conservative homes, where men may retain power over female relatives regardless of what the laws say.

Image
Saudi women were not allowed to work in public spaces until 2015.
CreditTasneem Alsultan for The New York Times

Absent some kind of government intervention to enforce the regulations, Mr. Coogle said, employers and officials may continue to require guardians’ involvement.

“That’s the trick,” he said. “We have to see what kind of infrastructure they put in place to implement these changes.”

But about two thirds of the kingdom’s 22 million citizens are under age 30, and many lack their elders’ attachment to the kingdom’s traditional social strictures. They are already used to seeing women working as supermarket cashiers and driving themselves to and from work.

Ms. AbuSulayman said on Twitter that while her father never put obstacles in her path, she had gone so far as to consider moving abroad to avoid being subject to the guardianship of her brothers.

Now, she said, her eldest daughter — who, under the current system, would have had to obtain her father’s permission to renew her passport this year — will grow up without restrictions on her right to travel.

“She will never know about this episode in our nation’s life,” Ms. AbuSulayman wrote. “A generation growing up completely free and equal to their brothers.”

But Saudi women’s experiences of guardianship can vary drastically according to their class and education, as well as their male guardians’ attitudes.

Image
A Saudi official filling in a marriage contract in April. The changes will be particularly important for separated women.
Credit  Tasneem Alsultan for The New York Times

If “some women’s dreams were aborted” by the travel barriers, Ms. AbuSulayman wrote, they were “a minor nuisance for most.” Still, she said, they were “a symbolic indignity for a wider concept of adulthood, accountability and meaning of personhood.”

Saudi social codes have long been driven by an ultraconservative interpretation of Islam and by traditional Arabian practices that kept women not only out of public life but also out of sight in many cases.

Girls’ education was introduced only in the 1960s, and even then it caused trouble in conservative cities. For decades, top state clerics have promoted strict segregation between women and men and have preached that it would be better if women stayed at home.

Most of those clerics have now been silenced and some of their old teachings expunged from government websites. While many likely oppose Prince Mohammed’s social reforms, they have kept quiet, either out of deference to the monarchy or because they fear arrest for speaking out.

Critics of the guardianship laws hailed the changes but they called on the kingdom to push further by allowing women to marry, live on their own and exit state facilities like domestic violence shelters without consent from their guardians.

And they noted a distinct discrepancy in the announcement. Even as the kingdom loosens the cuffs of guardianship, about a dozen female Saudi activists who spoke out about reforming the system remain imprisoned on charges related to their activism on women’s issues.

Some have been detained for more than a year, undergoing court proceedings wrapped in secrecy, and rights groups have said that they have reported being tortured and sexually harassed while in prison.

“As long as the women activists are still being tried and charged for calling for these same reforms, well, we’re still within the same social contract,” said Lynn Maalouf, the director of Middle East research for Amnesty International.



______________________________

Jai Sen

Independent researcher, editor

jai...@cacim.net

Now based in New Delhi, India (+91-98189 11325) and in Ottawa, Canada, on unceded Anishinaabe territory (+1-613-282 2900) 

Current associations : www.cacim.net / http://www.openword.net.in

CURRENT / RECENT publications :

Jai Sen, ed, 2018a – The Movements of Movements, Part 2 : Rethinking Our Dance. Ebook and hard copy available at PM Press

Jai Sen, ed, 2018b – The Movements of Movements, Part 1 : What Makes Us Move ?, Indian edition. New Delhi : AuthorsUpfront, in collaboration with OpenWord and PM Press.  Hard copy available at MOM1AmazonIN, MOM1Flipkart, and MOM1AUpFront

Jai Sen, ed, 2017 – The Movements of Movements, Part 1 : What Makes Us Move ?.  New Delhi : OpenWord and Oakland, CA : PM Press.  Ebook and hard copy available at PM Press

Jai Sen, ed, 2016a   The Movements of Movements, Part 1 : What Makes Us Move ? and Jai Sen, ed, 2016b – The Movements of Movements, Part 2 : Rethinking Our Dance (both then forthcoming from New Delhi : OpenWord and Oakland, CA : PM Press), open access ADVANCE PREFINAL ONLINE MOVEMENT EDITIONS @ www.cacim.net

SUBSCRIBE TO World Social Movement Discuss, an open, unmoderated, and self-organising forum on social and political movement at any level (local, national, regional, and global).  To subscribe, simply send an empty email to wsm-discus...@lists.openspaceforum.net


Reply all
Reply to author
Forward
0 new messages