http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=63742&d=14&m=5&y=2005

            Saturday, 14, May, 2005 (05, Rabi` al-Thani, 1426)


                  Women Students Having Identity (Card) Crisis

                  Lulwa Shalhoub, Arab News 
                    
                  JEDDAH, 14 May 2005 - It's an identity crisis. For women 
studying at King Abdul Aziz University (KAAU), forgetting a student ID card can 
mean a missed class or the start of a daylong bureaucratic process. The irony 
is the university does not even require male students to show them. 

                  Women KAAU students must produce the cards to security 
officials when asked to prove they are supposed to be at the university. Women 
who forget their ID cards must sign a form promising that they will not forget 
their IDs again. The problem is getting it stamped.

                  "Two weeks ago, I forgot to bring my ID card because I 
changed the bag I was using the day before, and the ID was in it," said Sumar 
Ahmed, a business administration student. "The guard told me that I should sign 
a form promising that I wouldn't forget my ID and that paper should be stamped 
by someone responsible in the Student Affairs Department."

                  The question becomes who's responsible? "I went to the 
Student Affairs, and they told me I was in the wrong place. I had to go to the 
Registration and Acceptance Department - far from where I was already." 

                  Off to the other side of campus.

                  "I walked in the heat, and every time I asked someone they 
said the stamp wasn't there - go to the next room," said Ahmed. "I entered 
seven offices before one of the employees understood how exhausted I had become 
and stamped the paper with her 'infamous' stamp."

                  Unfortunately, it wasn't yet over for the young woman when a 
security guard told her she had gotten the wrong stamp. She told the guard that 
was the stamp she was given and that she wasn't about to repeat the process.

                  Exams are stressful for men and women students - more 
stressful for women who are prevented from entering their classes.

                  "I arrived at 9:50 a.m., and my final exam started at 10 a.m. 
That day, I left my ID at home," said Sarah Abdul Raheem, a third-year student 
in KAAU. "I tried to reason with the guard about not having my ID. The guard 
rudely replied that I looked suspicious and that I didn't have my card, meaning 
that I was out with a guy and I came back to the university."

                  It didn't do wonders for her test scores. "There was no real 
connection between her idea and my situation," Sarah said. "I was so shocked by 
what I had heard that I didn't know what to say. After the incident ended, I 
entered the exam hall feeling depressed because of the guard's behavior and 
couldn't concentrate on my exam." 

                  Some women say they're getting unfair treatment. "If I'm not 
a student at the university," said Mona Ibrahim, "why would I enter it in the 
first place? I wouldn't go there to have fun, for example. Usually students try 
to sneak out from university - not in. I also don't understand why the same 
rules don't apply to male students. They are not even asked to show ID cards. 
Are we more dangerous?"

                  Of course, some students practice pragmatism. "When I was 
studying in KAAU, I forgot to bring my ID roughly five times. I was able to 
avoid the lengthy paperwork. By hiding in the crowd I could enter without any 
trouble," said Lama Dawood, a 2004 graduate. 

                  Some students say the ID rule has its place - right next to 
politeness.

                  "The ID card was made for our security to prevent any 
intruders who might enter the university," said Jameela Ahmed.

                  "Danger is unpredictable - especially with recent events, 
which demonstrate that danger can come from anywhere. Students should think 
harder about the concept of showing the ID card when entering; however, the 
behavior of the guards is unjustifiable."
                 
           
     


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