I must say that whats happening to women in Saudi Arabia is not only funny but stupid (if i may add). Treating women as though they were less humans is not only inhumane but ungodly.
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia --
Saudi activists said more than 60 women claimed to have answered their call on
Saturday to get behind the wheel in a rare show of defiance against a ban on
female driving in the ultraconservative kingdom.
Saudi professor and
campaigner Aziza Youssef said the group has received 13 videos and another 50
phone messages from women showing or claiming they had driven. She said they
have no way to verify the messages.
If the numbers are accurate,
this year's campaign is the most successful effort yet by Saudi women demanding
the right to drive. Youssef said they have not received any reports of arrests
or women being ticketed by police.
A security official said
that authorities did not arrest or fine any female drivers on Saturday. He
spoke on condition of anonymity because he was not authorized to speak to the
media.
However, there have been
a few roadblocks along the way.
Youssef said she and
four other prominent women activists received phone calls this week from a top
official with close links to Interior Minister Prince Mohammed bin Nayef,
warning them not to drive on Saturday, the day the campaign set for women's
driving.
She also said that
"two suspicious cars" have been following her everywhere all day.
"I don't know from which party they are from. They are not in a government
car," she said.
Though no specific Saudi
law bans women from driving, women are not issued licenses. They mostly rely on
drivers or male relatives to move around.
Powerful clerics who
hold far-reaching influence over the monarchy enforce the driving ban, warning
that breaking it will spread "licentiousness." A prominent cleric
caused a stir when he said last month that medical studies show that driving a
car harms a woman's ovaries.
The kingdom's first
major driving protest came in 1990 when some 50 women drove their cars. They
were jailed for a day, had their passports confiscated and lost their jobs. In
June 2011, about 40 women got behind the wheel in several cities in a protest
sparked when a woman was arrested after posting a video of herself driving.
The atmosphere appeared
more tolerant this year and state newspapers for the first time have run near
daily commentary on the issue. Reforms made by the monarchy since the last 2011
driving campaign may have readied the deeply conservative nation for change.
Changes include allowing women to sit on the national advisory council and a
decision by King Abdullah to permit women to vote and run in municipal
elections in 2015.
May Al Sawyan, a 32
year-old mother of two and an economic researcher, told The Associated Press
that she drove from her home in Riyadh to the grocery store and back.
Like other female
drivers defying the ban in Saudi Arabia, Al Sawyan said she has obtained a
driver's license from abroad.
"I am very happy
and proud that there was no reaction against me," she said. "There
were some cars that drove by. They were surprised, but it was just a glance. It
is fine ... They are not used to seeing women driving here."
In the run-up to the
Oct. 26 driving campaign, Interior Ministry spokesman Mansour al-Turki warned
that anyone disturbing public order would be dealt with forcefully. That same language
was used in charges levied against a female driver in 2011.
Women have been posting
videos almost daily of themselves driving since the campaign's website was
launched in late September, enraging conservatives in the country who accused
the government of not doing anything to stop them from flouting the ban. In one
incident this month, two women were pulled over by police who made them sign a
letter stating they would not drive or be in the car with a female driver.
Their husbands were called to pick them up.
Ultraconservative
clerics, angry that the government is not cracking down harder, protested
earlier in the week against the online petition campaign, which claims to have
more than 16,000 signatures. The account's website, oct26driving.org, and
official English language YouTube account were hacked on Friday, according to
activists.
The four-minute video
uploaded Saturday of Al Sawyan showed her wearing sunglasses and her face was
visible. Her hair was covered by the traditional black headscarf worn by Saudi
women.
Al Sawyan said she was
prepared for the risk of detention if caught. She said she was far enough from
a police car that she was not spotted.
"I just took a
small loop. I didn't drive for a long way, but it was fine. I went to the
grocery store," she said.
Her husband and family
waited at home and called her nervously when she arrived at the store to check
on her, she said. She drove with a local female television reporter in the car.
They were both without male relatives in the vehicle, which in itself defies
the country's strict norms requiring women to have a male guardian in public.
Deputy editor-in-chief
of the state-backed newspaper Saudi Gazette, Somayya Jabarti, said she envies
her male co-workers who can jump in their cars and leave the office while she
has to co-ordinate ahead of time for a driver or relative.
"The struggle is
more that people should have the option to choose," she said. "The
logo of this current driving campaign is that women's driving is a choice.
"


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