http://arabnews.com/saudiarabia/article306361.ece

Don't try to control our lives, say Saudi women
By RIMA AL-MUKHTAR | ARAB NEWS 

Published: Mar 8, 2011 00:25 Updated: Mar 8, 2011 00:25 

JEDDAH: Young Saudi women are calling for more freedom and liberty in their own 
country. On International Women's Day, university students claim that women in 
Saudi Arabia need more independence because their daily life is filled with 
restrictions. 

Arab News spoke to young Saudi women about their thoughts on the future.

"One of our simple rights is to be able to drive to college. I don't understand 
why it's prohibited for us to be in the driving seat," said 22-year-old Zakeyya 
Ghulman. "I'm sick and tired of the driver being late and busy with all the 
work my family is giving him - dropping my mom off at the doctor,  picking up 
my sister from school. I keep waiting for him for hours."

Traveling without a male guardian and having to wait for his approval creates 
problems for  20-year-old Kholoud Mamoon. "My parents are divorced. My mother 
is from Egypt, and she lives there. My problem is that every time I want to 
visit my mother I face a lot of resistance from my father before I finally get 
him to take me to see my mom," she said. "I want to just pack my bags and book 
a flight for the weekend to visit my mom whenever I need to."

Under Saudi law, women require their guardians's permission to leave the 
country - either by escorting them to the airport and signing an exit waiver or 
by obtaining single-use or multiple-use permission forms that women keep with 
their passports.

Having the freedom to choose her future husband is what 25-year-old Amal Al-Ali 
really wants. "I come from a family that controls young women and does not give 
them the option to even choose their future," she said. "Our generation is new 
and out there, we see and mix with men more than my mother and grandmother did 
when they were my age," she said.

Amal added that her father decided when she was a baby that she was going to 
marry her cousin. While Islamic custom grants fathers the right to reject male 
suitors, it does not permit fathers to arrange marriages against the consent of 
their daughters. However, going against a father's will can prove to be a 
formidable challenge for daughters and sons alike.

Some jobs and college studies are prohibited to Saudi women, especially if 
they're perceived by parents to be inappropriate for women.

"I always wanted to study journalism, but my father was so against it that he 
controlled my high school certificate study, my college study; and I'm sure he 
will control my job options," said 19-year-old Nora Al-Harthy. "His argument 
was that journalists have to mix with men in the office and talk to them by 
phone or even interview them. This act in our family is taboo."

As for sports, stadiums are no-go zones for women - something that irks the 
Kingdom's many female football fanatics. "This is nonsense," said 20-year-old 
Mona Bokhary. "I have a passion for football and it doesn't make sense that 
women are not allowed to watch football live and always have to watch it on big 
screens. I want to attend a football match and hear people cheering for their 
favorite team and feel the game. What's the harm in that? Why isn't it allowed 
for women to go there? Why not make women's only sections at local stadiums?"

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