http://www.arabnews.com/?page=1&section=0&article=93449&d=11&m=3&y=2007&pix=kingdom.jpg&category=Kingdom

Sunday, 11, March, 2007 (21, Safar, 1428)

      Some Women Complain of Being Fleeced by Husbands
      Arab News 
        
      MAKKAH, 11 March 2007 - In increasing numbers, many working women in the 
Kingdom complain that their husbands fail to meet their financial expenses and 
those of their children. In fact, some women say they end up paying not only 
for themselves and their children but also have to fork out for household 
expenses, their husbands' and that of their extended families.

      "My husband stopped spending on me as soon as I started working. He sees 
no need to spend on me as long as I have the ability to spend on myself. I 
don't mind that, but what I can't accept is when he doesn't spend on the 
children, the maid and the driver as well," said a Saudi nurse employed at a 
government hospital in Makkah.

      She believes husbands should spend on their wives and children, 
regardless of what the situation may be. "That causes a lot of problems between 
us and some times my husband leaves the house for two or three days," she said.

      Umm Hatem, an administrative employee at a state school in Jeddah, said: 
"If you saw my husband spending on himself, you would think he was the 
wealthiest man on earth. Everything he spends comes from what I earn. He saves 
his salary without spending anything on us except when there is an occasion 
such as a big party or a wedding."

      Umm Hatem added that her friends tell her that her husband spends 
lavishly on friends while on holiday abroad. "I don't mind helping him if he is 
really in need and I've never complained to any of his relatives; he would 
divorce me if I did," she said.

      Meanwhile, Umm Abdullah says her husband forces her to cover her 
daughters' expenses as a form of punishment. "My husband is punishing me for 
having four daughters and only one son. He makes me pay their expenses for 
school, clothes, the maid, the driver and everything else," she said.

      "When my husband proposed, he made a condition that I wasn't allowed to 
work. So when he agreed to let me work as a teacher, I was extremely 
surprised," said mother of two, Umm Ayman. When she received her first salary, 
her husband told her about some saving pools he had in mind. She said that her 
husband wanted her to participate in them and cover household expenses. (It is 
common in the Kingdom for groups of people to pool a fixed amount of money 
every month. The money is taken each month by one member of the group so that a 
different member takes the money each month.)

      "I happily agreed and together with my husband, we joined several saving 
pools," Umm Ayman said, adding that she hands all the money she receives to her 
husband. "Later I was surprised to discover that he is doing nothing but 
spending the money on himself. When I confronted him, he accused me of 
insulting him. Once I have finished with these saving groups, I'll take some 
strict action."

      Mariam Abu Huraira said: "Islam gives women a number of rights and gives 
them complete freedom to do whatever they want with their money. This is 
regardless of whether the money is inherited or earned. No one has the right to 
force a woman to spend on things she doesn't want to," she said.

      Social researcher Hafsa Shuaib, who works for an organization that 
provides help to women, said there were a large number of relationships in 
which men abuse the trust of women. Hafsa believes that the problem begins at a 
young age. She says that with most girls being better educated than boys, girls 
generally end up getting employed before their brothers. It is then, she says, 
that boys get into the habit of relying on their female relatives for cash.

      "I've noticed on several occasions at ATM machines that a man uses his 
wife's or sister's ATM card to withdraw huge sums of money, handing her only a 
hundred or so as if it is his right. It would be better if the wife's family 
were to put a premarital condition on the husband that he not be allowed to 
spend his wife's money," she said.

      Hafsa added that in the past a man would refuse help from his wife and 
consider her financial help an insult. "Men would consider it as a way of 
minimizing their role as the head of the house. Now men look for working women 
who can spend on them and cover household expenses. A woman who is helping her 
husband financially doesn't detract from the husband's role. What is sad is 
when a woman spends on her husband and children while he saves his money for 
himself."
     


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