WUNRN
Carnegie Foundation for
International Peace
Arab Reform Bulletin
May
12, 2010
Jafar
Alshayeb
After years of stymied efforts, the reform focus in Saudi Arabia is centering on women’s rights. A recent survey by the Researchers Center for Women’s Studies in Riyadh (Markaz Bahithat li Dirasat al-Mar’a) examining Saudi newspapers and websites showed that from mid January to mid February 2010 some 40 percent of articles in print media and 58 percent of articles on websites treated women’s issues. Empowering women has become a priority for local activists and various initiatives are springing up to secure their basic rights. The most recent and ambitious of these efforts is a national campaign, driven by local actors, calling for women’s participation in municipal elections scheduled for autumn 2011.
Prominent
human rights activists, women’s rights activists, writers, and elected
municipal council members are spearheading this national campaign for electoral
participation, which was launched in March 2010. The goal is to
coordinate activities on this issue throughout the Kingdom, including advocacy
and media coverage, public meetings and speeches, writing to officials, and
training candidates. The Ministry of Municipal and Rural Affairs has not yet
ruled on the issue of allowing women to vote or to register as
candidates.
The relatively liberal position taken by King Abdullah on fostering the role of
women in Saudi society has created an opening for such initiatives. The King
appointed a woman to be deputy minister of education, the highest public office
in the country to be held by a woman so far, in February 2009. A few months
later, a member of the Senior Religious Council was fired from his post after
condemning King Abdullah University of Science and Technology’s coed
environment. In December 2009, Lama Alsulaiman was the first woman to win
a seat in the Chamber of Commerce and Industry (CCI) in Jeddah and became the
Vice Chairman of the most prestigious business organization in the country.
Following that, the Ministry of Commerce appointed four women board members to
CCIs: Faten Bundaqji and Aisha Natto in Jeddah, and Hama AlZuhair and Sameera AlSowaigh
in the Eastern Province.
Taking into consideration the social and religious restrictions on women in the
society, Saudi businesswomen have made major strides in the last few years
toward breaking down barriers and gaining legislation that created a less
restrictive business environment. For instance, in 2008 Prince Khalid Alfaisal,
Governor of Mecca, modified Article 160 of the Labor Law which prohibited men
and women from interacting in a business environment. The Ministry of Labor
also revised labor laws in 2008 in order to give women the choice to work.
Women no longer require a male guardian’s approval to get or leave a job. In
the same year, the Ministry of Trade also reversed a ban on women staying in
hotels alone. A new law is expected to give women the right to travel abroad
without a male guardian’s approval and the ability to use their national ID
cards to travel to GCC states.
Among many individual initiatives related to women’s rights is a campaign
called “Where are my rights?” headed by Khloud Alfahad, a businesswoman from
Khobar, who seeks to educate women about their basic rights and equality
between the sexes via publications, a website, and frequent media coverage.
Suad Alshamary, the first women lawyer in the Kingdom, has pursued many cases
related to violations of women’s rights to divorce and protection, child care
and support, and compensation for injury. In cooperation with other lawyers,
she is currently pushing for legislation to set the age for legal marriage in
order to avoid the barbaric forced marriage of young girls. Other
initiatives include establishing centers to protect victims of domestic
violence as well as campaigns on divorce rights, family laws, and the rights of
women married to non-Saudis. Most women’s rights initiatives are currently
headed by individuals rather than associations due to the heavy restrictions on
civil society organizations in the Kingdom.
The growing activism of women—spurred in part by their awareness of the greater
involvement in public life of women in neighboring states such as Bahrain and
Kuwait, as well as attention from international figures such as Yakin Ertürk,
former Special Rapporteur of the United Nations Human Rights Council on
Violence Against Women—have prompted tense debates between traditional ultra
conservative religious leaders and an increasingly outspoken liberal
intellectual elite. Advancing women’s rights is a contentious and divisive
issue not only among the religious conservative leaders, but also within the
ruling family. The faction of the ruling family that is closer to conservative
religious leaders, such as Prince Nayef, appears less enthusiastic about
championing women’s rights. Among the debated issues are gender interaction in
schools and colleges, women’s sports, participation in elections for the
chambers of commerce and municipal councils, women’s driving, male guardian
sponsorship, domestic violence, definition of marriage age, and inheritance
laws.
Conservative religious leaders still enjoy much influence and have been able to
slow many liberal initiatives undertaken by the cabinet to expand women’s role
in government and to allow them entry into new sectors of public life. But
while women face a long road to achieve their full rights in Saudi Arabia, as long
as the King continues to support moderate change and women rights activists
remain active, gradual and sustainable reform can take place.
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