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Saudi Arabia celebrates its first ever Women's Day in Riyadh

Kuwaiti Girl

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Saudi Arabia celebrates its first ever Women's Day in Riyadh
Ultra-conservative Islamic kingdom is ranked 134 out of 145 countries for gender equality

http://www.independent.co.uk/news/w...ic-kingdom-guardianship-driving-a7563586.html

Saudi Arabia has celebrated its own Women’s Day, a first for the ultra-conservative Islamic kingdom.

A three-day gathering was held at the King Fahd Cultural Centre in the capital of Riyadh.

It featured speakers who argued for women’s rights to drive and called for an end to the country's male guardianship system.

Female members of the Saudi royal family also attended the event, with Princess Al-Jawhara bint Fahd Al-Saud hosting a discussion on women’s roles in education.

“We want to celebrate the Saudi woman and her successful role, and remind people of her achievements in education, culture, medicine, literature and other areas,” Mohammed Al-Saif, a spokesman for the centre, told Arab News.

The kingdom has been heavily criticised for its record on women’s rights, where women are severely restricted.

The World Economic Forum’s 2015 Global Gender Gap report ranked Saudi Arabia 134 out of 145 countries for gender equality.

Saudi Arabia is the only country in the world where women are prohibited from driving and are unable to obtain a driving licence.

It also has a law stating that all women must have a male guardian, typically a husband, father or brother, who gives them permission to study, travel abroad or marry.

A Human Rights Watch report on male guardianship found “a woman’s life is controlled by a man from birth until death” in Saudi Arabia, as their ability to pursue a career or make life decisions is restricted.

Despite limited reforms in 2009 and 2013 to reduce male control over women, which included no longer requiring permission for women to work and making domestic abuse illegal, the report found the system remains largely in place.

Towards the end of last year, a Saudi man was jailed for a year after calling for an end to the system.

The kingdom is preparing to begin several cultural and economic reforms, known as Vision 2030.

However, the reforms have already been attacked by the country’s religious authority, Grand Mufti Sheikh Abdulaziz Al al-Sheikh, who said legalising cinemas and concerts could lead to the “mixing of sexes” and “atheistic or rotten” influences.
 
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Other than the ban on women driving which is stupid, most outsiders know very little about our women's real situaton. Most importantly, they don't relize that most restrictions are social since this is how people lived in the Arabian Penesual for centuries. They think that these restrctions are legal, while not knowing that social restrictions in many ME countries are far more powerful than any legal restrctions (given the loose enforcmnet of laws across the region).​
 
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Iran is not really liberal when it comes to women , you don't really have to believe them just because they are supposedly "Persian" , most of them are turk and they brand themselves as Persian ,

infact the current trend of couples walking hand in hand started in the UAE ! I was there in Dubai before the 2009 presidential election protests in iran ; and I saw this phenomenon of arab couples walking hand in hand
 
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I really hope the Saudi deputy crown prince Mohammad bin Salman is serious about social reforms.

I want to see these social reforms soon. It can help foster regional integration.

It shouldn't take long for Saudi society to become similar to the societies of Kuwait, Bahrain and Qatar.
 
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