Women in
Saudi Arabia will not need a male guardian's approval to run or vote in
municipal elections in 2015, when women will also run for office for the first
time, a Saudi official has said.
The change
signifies a step forward in easing the kingdom's restrictions against women,
but it falls far short of what some Saudi reformers are calling for.
Shura
Council member Fahad al-Anzi was quoted in the state-run al-Watan newspaper on
Wednesday saying that approval for women to run and vote came from the guardian
of Islam's holiest sites, the Saudi king, and therefore women will not need a
male guardian's approval.
The country's Shura Council is an all-male
consultative body with no legislative powers.
Despite the
historic decision by the king to allow women the right to participate in the
country's only open elections, male guardian laws in Saudi Arabia remain
largely unchanged. Women cannot travel, work, study abroad, marry, get divorced
or gain admittance to a public hospital without permission from a male
guardian.
The country
is guided by an ultraconservative interpretation of Islam called Wahhabism.
Hatoun
al-Fasi, a women's history professor in Riyadh, said just the announcement that
Saudi women can run for office and vote without permission will stir debate.
"It's
being brought up out of the blue and could open doors to discussions that we
have enough of already," al-Fasi said.
While King
Abdullah has pushed for some changes on women's rights, he has been cautious
not to push too hard against ultraconservative clerics, who have in the past
challenged social reforms. Saudi's ruling family draws its legitimacy from the
backing of the kingdom's religious establishment.
The male
guardianship laws are particularly stifling for women, Saudi female activist
Wajeha al-Hawidar said.
"These
laws make the woman like a child in all aspects of her life. She is not dealt
with as an adult with a fully developed brain," al-Hawidar said.
The
restrictions are practically all-encompassing.
Saudi women
cannot study abroad unless a male guardian approves and accompanies them
throughout their studies. Government-run hospitals are allowed to perform
surgery on women only with approval from a male guardian, except in
emergencies. Male guardians in Saudi Arabia are allowed to remove their
daughters or sisters from school at any time. In the case that a father, uncle
or brother is not available, mothers turn to their sons for approval to work or
travel.
"Male
guardianship laws are a problem that the Saudi woman has been dealing with for
years.
It's our number one demand that these laws be revoked," al-Fasi
said. "It goes against the social rights that Islam gives women."
Al-Fasi and
other Saudi women have been pushing the Saudi government for social reforms and
greater rights for women, including allowing women the right to drive and for
the dissolution of male guardianship laws. Saudi women have staged protests
defying the ban.
Al-Hawidar
said Wednesday's announcement means another barrier for women in Saudi Arabia
has been lifted. However, she said the government might not see it through,
because of expected resistance by those opposing such reforms.
"There
are people in the government willing to listen reasonably, but people in
society are not," al-Hawidar said. "They will hate you just for being
different, and with these people there is no common language."

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