When Will Saudi Women Finally Win The Right To Drive?

Manal al-Sharif

Manal al-Sharif publicly defied the ban on Saudi women drivers (Jemal Countess/Getty Images for TIME)

One year ago, Manal al-Sharif, divorced mother of one, took it upon herself to do something, women across the world do every day: Drive.

In May 2011, Manal al-Sharif got in a car and drove through the streets of Khobar, Saudi Arabia. Filmed by an acquaintance, al-Sharif followed the 1990 demonstration in which Saudi women took on the streets of the capital and drove without permission. Her action not only caused an uproar in the kingdom, but also laid ground for the now well-known Women2Drive campaign that celebrates its anniversary on June 17.

Activists around the world took to social media to support the campaign, including Amnesty activists who recently collected portraits of activists supporting the right to drive for Saudi women.

Since 1990, Saudi women have been banned from driving, a restriction that severely limits women’s freedom of movement. Women are also not allowed to travel by themselves and are strongly discouraged from using public transportation. The discouragement of women’s mobility is enforced by severe measures of corporal punishment, including flogging.

A Saudi woman gets out of a car after being given a ride by her driver in Riyadh © Fayez Nureldine/AFP/Getty Images

Just earlier this year, two days after King Abdullah granted women the right to vote, Shaima Jastaina was sentenced to 10 lashes for driving. Even though Saudi King Abdullah overturned Shaima’s sentence, the judicial action raised warning flags regarding the continuing discrimination Saudi women face.

It is thus no surprise that al-Sharif told CNN in an interview last week that “driving is just a starting point.” “The campaign [Women2Drive] isn’t really about driving,” she said. “Driving, in one sense is a stand-in for other issues,” including getting married, going school, leaving the country or opening a bank account without permission of a male guardian.

While al-Sharif won’t get behind the wheel this year to honor the anniversary of the Women2Drive campaign, she is certain that many others will drive their way toward equality — with full speed, of course.

Lara Zuzan Golesorkhi, Amnesty International USA country specialist for Saudi Arabia, contributed to this post.

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4 thoughts on “When Will Saudi Women Finally Win The Right To Drive?

  1. This is amazing because there is no actual law that states woman can not drive. The reason they don't is mainly because of the large fear woman have of fines, jail or floggings for driving. I pray that things will get better for the Saudi woman soon.

  2. Good for you, ladies. It sound like the males have you under their feet , and want to keep you there. They are barbarian, living in the stone age. They want to show you their superiority and think some how they better than women, who have no value at all. They probably murder their female children, because they are of no use to them.

  3. They can change the laws but what stayes is the attitude of local males. But this is a start.

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