Saudi Arabia

Saudi Arabia: We Say "Yes" to Women's Full Enjoyment of their Rights

Publication Date: 
October 2, 2011
Source: 
Violence is Not our Culture
Violence is Not our Culture (VNC)


The Violence is Not our Culture (VNC) Campaign welcomes long awaited and recent reforms announced by King Abdullah Bin-Abd-al-Aziz Al Saud, that promise to gives Saudi Arabian women the rights to vote and run for office in municipal council elections, and to become full voting members of the next Shura council. The promise to increase women’s participation in civic life is a tribute to women’s efforts on the ground who have been campaigning inside the country, despite strict and rigid opposition.

However the measure remains, in King Abdullah’s own words, a “cautious reform”.

Saudi Arabia: Woman Driver Pardoned from Lashing by King Abdullah

Publication Date: 
September 29, 2011
Source: 
The Guardian
A woman drives a car in Riyadh as part of a campaign to defy Saudi Arabia's ban on women driving. (Photo: Change.org/AP)


A for defying the country's ban on female drivers has had her punishment overturned by the king.

The woman, named as Shaima Jastaina and believed to be in her 30s, was found guilty of driving without permission in Jeddah in July. Her case was the first in which a legal punishment was handed down for a violation of the ban in the ultraconservative Muslim nation.

Saudi Arabia: Court Orders Lashing of Woman for Defying Driving Ban

Publication Date: 
September 27, 2011
Source: 
BBC
Saudi women will soon be allowed to vote but driving remains a banned activity. 2011. (Photo: BBC)


A court in Saudi Arabia has sentenced a woman to 10 lashes for breaking the country's ban on female drivers.

The woman, identified only as Shema, was found guilty of driving in Jeddah in July.

Women2drive, which campaigns for women to be allowed to drive in Saudi Arabia, says she has already lodged an appeal.

Saudi Arabia: Voting Reform Excludes Other Forms of Discrimination

Publication Date: 
September 26, 2011
Source: 
Human Rights Watch
Saudi King Abdullah (speaking) attends Shura assembly in Riyadh to announce women's right to vote, September 25, 2011 (Reuters)


(Amman) September 26, 2011 – King Abdullah’s announcement that women will be able to participate in municipal elections in 2015 and become members of the consultative Shura Council is a long overdue step toward greater participation of women in public life, Human Rights Watch said today. In his statement on September 25, 2011, Abdullah made no reference to reforming other areas of discrimination against women, such as the guardianship system that authorizes male control over women and the ban on women driving.

Saudi Arabia: King Grants Women the Right to Vote

Publication Date: 
September 25, 2011
Source: 
New York Times
Women in Saudi Arabia endure strict gender separation, including a ban against driving. Photo: Fahad Shadeed/Reuters

on Sunday granted women the right to vote and run in future municipal elections, the biggest change in a decade for women in a puritanical kingdom that practices strict separation of the sexes, including banning women from driving.

Saudi women, who are legally subject to male chaperones for almost any public activity, hailed the royal decree as an important, if limited, step toward making them equal to their male counterparts. They said the uprisings sweeping the Arab world for the past nine months — along with sustained domestic pressure for women’s rights and a more representative form of government — prompted the change.

Tunisia: Leading the way on women's rights in the Middle East

Publication Date: 
September 10, 2011
Source: 
The Guardian
Protesters from Tunisia's marginalised rural heartlands march in central Tunis during the uprising.Photo: Zohra Bensemra/Reuters


Last December, , triggering a political earthquake that has sent shockwaves through most of the Middle East and north Africa. Now, Tunisia is leading the way once again – this time on the vexed issue of gender equality.

It has become the first country in the region to withdraw all its specific reservations regarding – the international convention on the elimination of all forms of discrimination against women.

Saudi Arabia: Efforts to include human rights in syllabuses

Publication Date: 
September 7, 2011
Source: 
Arab News


JEDDAH: Chairman of the National Society for Human Rights (NSHR) Mufleh Al-Qahtani has said the organization is making efforts to introduce the subject of human rights in higher and general education syllabuses in Saudi Arabia.

“The organization has put a special emphasis on this issue, held seminars and carried out activities in this regard,” he said on Tuesday.

Al-Qahtani said a joint workshop between the organization and the Ministry of Education made specific recommendations on the issue that were currently being studied.

Saudi Arabia: Call for Family Courts

Publication Date: 
August 16, 2011
Source: 
Gulf in the Media

16 August 2011 - Family courts should be set up in the Kingdom and couples undergo pre-marital counseling to help counter increasing instances of domestic violence and help save marriages. This has been proposed by Dr. Waleed Al-Sadoon, an adviser at the Ministry of Islamic Affairs, Endowments, Call (Dawah) and Guidance. “This will help curtail family violence cases that have spread in our society.”

Saudi Arabia to set minimum marriage age following surge in such weddings

Publication Date: 
July 25, 2011
Source: 
Al Arabiya
saudi.jpg

Saudi Arabia intends to set a minimum age for girls allowed to marry under a new law intended to curb child marriages following a surge in such a phenomenon in the conservative Gulf Kingdom.

Saudi Arabia: 5 women detained for driving, activist says

Publication Date: 
June 29, 2011
Source: 
ABS-CBN News


RIYADH, Saudi Arabia - Saudi Arabian police detained 5 women for defying the conservative kingdom's driving ban, an activist said on Wednesday, although police said they had detained only one.

"All the cases were in Jeddah and we were really surprised to hear this because this was not the case before," said Saudi activist Eman al-Nafjan.

Authorities have appeared to allow driving this month by dozens of women who answered a call from groups, including "Women2Drive" and "Women's Right to Drive in KSA", to challenge the ban. Many posted accounts of their driving on the Internet.