http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=101256&d=16&m=9&y=2007&pix=kingdom.jpg&category=Kingdom

            Sunday, 16, September, 2007 (04, Ramadhan, 1428)


                  Saudi Women Petitioning Govt for Driving Rights
                  Ebtihal Mubarak, Arab News 

                 
                  JEDDAH, 16 September 2007 - A group of Saudi women plan to 
give a petition to the government asking to be allowed to drive cars. The 
organizers say the petition would be sent to the government on Sept. 23, the 
Saudi National Day.

                  "We demand that the right of women to drive is given back to 
us," says the petition. "It's a right that was enjoyed by our mothers and 
grandmothers in complete freedom to (utilize) the means of transportation in 
those times."

                  The petition, which has been posted on different Saudi 
websites and circulated through e-mails for the past few weeks, asks not only 
Saudis but also people from around the world to sign their names.

                  "Women are in urgent need of driving; it's a basic need," 
said one of the petition drive's organizers, Fawzeyah Al-Oyouni, a human rights 
activist and wife of poet Ali Domaini.

                  "Custodian of the Two Holy Mosques King Abdullah said 
previously that it is not a political issue, it is a social one, and that the 
government does not object (to women driving)," she said.

                  Government officials made statements last year indicating 
that the decision of women driving is up to society and not the repeal of any 
law. Indeed, there is no law in the Kingdom that explicitly states that women 
cannot drive.

                  The ban comes from a strict interpretation of the woman's 
need to be with a legal guardian (a mahram) in public.

                  Scholars in Saudi Arabia argue that allowing women to drive 
would mean they might interact with unrelated men, such as police officers or 
men who come to assist them in the event of their car breaking down.

                  Saudi novelist and columnist Abdu Khal wrote last week in his 
article "What Would Happen If We Let Women Drive?" that the interpretation is 
flawed. In many cases, the only alternative women have is to use drivers, which 
forces them to interact with unrelated men.

                  He added that Saudi Arabia's ban on women driving has 
isolated it from the rest of the world, including the Islamic world. "Other 
than our scholars, of course, no one has said that allowing women to drive 
might lead to moral corruption," wrote Khal. "Are we the only Muslims on Earth?"

                  The women, who have organized this petition, reminded other 
women that "rights are not given or earned, they're taken."

                  On Nov. 6, 1990, 47 Saudi women were briefly detained while 
driving cars publicly while demanding the right to drive. After this, the 
debate disappeared from the media for a few years. In recent years it has 
re-emerged as a topic that is no longer a taboo.

                  The petition is the first action taken by a newly formed 
society that calls itself "The Society for Protecting and Defending Women's 
Rights."

                  Al-Oyouni, one of the founders, along with poet and human 
rights activist Wajeha Al-Huwaidar and social worker Haifa Osrah and others, 
said that the group also aims to tackle other issues, such as domestic abuse.
                 
           
     

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