http://weekly.ahram.org.eg/2011/1066/re2.htm
29 September - 5 October 2011
Issue No. 1066
Published in Cairo by AL-AHRAM established in 1875
A slow Saudi 'Spring'
Saudi women surprised as king grants them right to vote, says Rashid Abul-Samh 

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Women across Saudi Arabia were pleasantly surprised on 25 September when King 
Abdullah announced in a five-minute speech televised live that he was granting 
women the right to vote in future municipal elections, the right to run as 
candidates, and that they would be appointed to the Shoura Council, the 
150-member body that advises the king on legislation and policy.

"I think this is a great step. It is definitely the beginning of the 
involvement of women in the political process, even if some say the municipal 
councils don't have much power," said Abeer Mishkhas, a Saudi journalist based 
in London, who has written extensively about the problems that Saudi women face.

"I had lost all hope in reform. But I see a ray of light. When will the summer 
begin?" tweeted Nawwarah Ashad of Al-Khobar.

"We refuse to marginalize the role of women in Saudi society and in every 
aspect, within the rules of Shariah," said Abdullah, who is an absolute 
monarch. "Muslim women in our Islamic history have demonstrated positions that 
expressed correct opinions and advice," he added, noting that the members of 
Saudi Arabia's clerical council, or Ulema, had praised and supported his 
decision.

Despite these new rights, Saudi women still face many restrictions in the 
extremely conservative kingdom, which follows a strict Wahhabi interpretation 
of Islam, such as not being allowed to drive, or to travel abroad or open a 
bank account without the written permission of a male guardian.

Women pushing for the right to drive started a defiance campaign this year 
across the country by taking to the streets and driving cars. Several were 
arrested, but the campaign gained much support through social networks on the 
Internet, including on Facebook and Twitter, especially after several of the 
women filmed themselves driving and posted the videos on YouTube.

Although there is no law that actually bans women from driving in Saudi Arabia, 
rigid social customs have not allowed Saudi women so far to claim their right 
to drive. Najla Hariri, a Jeddah resident who repeatedly drove in that city and 
was briefly detained on 24 August for doing so, was informed on 26 September 
that the authorities were pressing charges against her and that she would face 
trial.

But not all Saudi women were happy with the king's news. Madawi Al-Rasheed, 
professor of social anthropology at King's College in London, and the author of 
"A History of Saudi Arabia", said she felt the announcement was superficial, 
aimed merely at appeasing those pushing for more substantial change.

"This is a typical reaction to the Arab Spring. Instead of promising real 
political participation in an elected Shoura Council, the king used the issue 
of women to create an illusion of reform," said Al-Rasheed. "In a society where 
all are disenfranchised, the appointment of women becomes yet another 
propaganda move. This gives the impression that we have only a women's problem 
in Saudi Arabia, nothing else," she explained.

All 150 members of the Shoura Council are appointed by the king, and serve 
four-year terms that are renewable. They cannot veto legislation and have no 
binding powers. In 2006, six women were appointed as advisers to the Shoura, 
and now number 12, though they do not currently have the right to vote.

Yet, other analysts of the kingdom's glacial speed of change said that King 
Abdullah's announcement was good news that heralded the improvement of women's 
status in the country.

"There had been so many pressures from women's groups. It's a continuous 
process of modernization. This will ease the government's path to improving the 
condition of women in other areas," said Jamal Khashoggi, general manager of 
the Al-Arab News Channel. "Consensus is always sought, in order not to upset 
the conservatives, but sometimes the ruler must intervene and take the lead, 
This happened with King Faisal when he introduced public education for girls 
and television in the 1960s, and this is happening now with King Abdullah," he 
said, adding, "there are conservatives that will always scream 'wolf!' when 
change happens, and we have to reassure them that Saudi Arabia won't become an 
open place where women are exploited."

Indeed, when the government announced in 2004 that municipal elections would be 
held the following year, for the first time since 1963, at least five women 
announced their candidacies to seats on councils. They were encouraged by the 
initial announcement that used gender-neutral language, which did not clearly 
indicate whether women would be allowed to vote or not. After several months, 
the government claimed that a lack of polling stations and the fact that only 
50 per cent of Saudi women at the time had photo ID-cards, meant that they 
would be excluded from the 2005 polls.

Half of the positions on the 178 councils across Saudi Arabia are up for grabs 
in this year's election, which finally takes place on 29 September, after being 
postponed indefinitely by the government in 2009 without much explanation. The 
government appoints the other half of the members. Women will only be able to 
vote in the 2015 elections.

Robert Lacey, the British author of "Inside the Kingdom: Kings, Clerics, 
Modernists and the Struggle for Saudi Arabia", said he believes King Abdullah 
is a true reformer and that he has used the upheavals across the Middle East of 
the Arab Spring as a pretext for pushing for more reform.

"The king has welcomed the Arab Spring as providing impetus for the reforms for 
which he has long campaigned," said Lacey. "He is a genuine reformer who has 
been fighting for change in this highly conservative society for many years. He 
obviously believes in the power of his family, but the record shows that he 
also believes in the power of his people to bring the kingdom up to date."

Now that women have been given access to the political process, some analysts 
hope that a fair representation of Saudi women from all walks of life will be 
given a voice in the municipal and Shoura councils.

"In the Shoura Council I think women will apply much needed pressure to 
highlight issues that are important to them, with driving as just one example," 
explained Mishkhas. "My only concern is that since women will be appointed to 
the Shoura, they will be more prone to being 'political choices', where only 
women from the upper class and with PhDs will be appointed and consequently 
won't represent concerns of women from all parts of society."

"Like Saudi men, Saudi women are a diverse group. Their perspectives and 
concerns vary across class, region, tribe and sect. It is important that this 
diversity is represented," said Toby Craig Jones, assistant professor of 
history at Rutgers University, and the author of "Desert Kingdom: How Oil and 
Water Forged Modern Saudi Arabia".

"Historically, however, Saudi Arabia's social complexity has not been reflected 
in its appointed institutions. Rather, the royal family has used such 
appointments to reward friends and allies. If they continue with this pattern, 
it would be disappointing but not surprising," added Jones.

Khashoggi said that he believes that the king took a bolder step in allowing 
women to vote and serve in positions of leadership, rather than allowing them 
to drive, because this touches on the Islamic concept of "wilayat al-Faqih" or 
Guardianship of the Scholars, which does not allow women to rule over Muslim 
nations. "The concept of 'wilayat' is very sensitive, so allowing women in 
political roles was more brave than allowing them to drive," he said.

Nevertheless, the ironic contradiction of allowing women the right to seek 
political office but not to drive, was not lost on some Saudi women, who 
questioned the continued enforcement of the "mahram" or male guardianship 
system, which highly restricts the freedom of movement of all Saudi women.

"Do women need a guardian's approval before applying for membership of the 
council? Or to vote? Or to travel with parliamentary delegations? Just 
questions inspired by the events," wrote Maram Meccawy, a Saudi columnist, on 
her Twitter account.

Human Rights Watch noted in a statement this week that Saudi Arabia promised 
the United Nations Human Rights Council in June 2009 that it would abolish the 
male guardianship system "but has yet to do so."

"King Abdullah's promise that women will finally be allowed to vote is a 
welcome move away from the discrimination and exclusion that Saudi women have 
suffered for so long," said Sarah Leah Whitson, Middle East director at Human 
Rights Watch.

In political terms, waiting four years until they can vote in 2015 is going to 
be an eternity for Saudi women, who will most likely face a backlash from 
conservatives opposed to them gaining these new rights. King Abdullah is 87 
years old and his successors are known to be less liberal, which means that 
Saudi women will face a long, bumpy and uncertain road.


[Non-text portions of this message have been removed]



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