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Saudi
Arabian activist Samar Badawi has been selected as one of this year's
recipients of the prestigious International Women of Courage Award.
by Jannie
Schipper and Karima Idrissi
The prize
is handed out by the US State Department and honours 10 extraordinary women
from all corners of the globe. Badawi gained international recognition in 2010:
she challenged Saudi Arabia's extremely restrictive guardianship system by
suing her father. She has also filed lawsuits against the government demanding the
right for women to vote and drive vehicles.
Badawi's
most recent campaign has been for the right to drive. She requested a driving
licence from the motor vehicles authorities in Jeddah, where she lives. After
the request was officially accepted, Badawi rang the ministry every day for two
months to find out the status of her application.
She says
the response was rude and unpleasant. She then filed a complaint with the
interior ministry. It is the latest move in the fight being waged by Saudi
women in their battle to be allowed to drive. They have also tried petitions
and driving cars, which has led to a number of arrests. Fellow activist Manal
al-Sharif, who was arrested last year for driving a car, has also filed a
complaint with the interior ministry.
Right to
lead your own life
Samar
Badawi says driving a car is a symbol of the wider right to freedom of movement
for Saudi women: "Women can't go onto the streets alone nor can they go to
government offices to arrange official documents, including a passport,"
she says. Badawi tells Radio Netherlands Worldwide, "I think the state
wants to deny women the right to travel because that would open the door for
other rights." Saudi Arabian women are not allowed to leave the country
unaccompanied.
Badawi has personal
experience with fighting for the right to lead one's own life. In 2010 she
became global news when she ended up in prison without a proper trial. She was
jailed because she had failed to obey her father, even though she was a
30-year-old woman with a child.
Father
versus daughter
In Saudi
Arabia, men control the lives of women: fathers have control of their daughters
until they marry and husbands have custody of their wives. If a woman divorces,
her father is once again legally responsible for her. Badawi says, "My
mother died when I was 13. My father beat me, verbally abused me and threw me
out of the house." Even after she married and had a son, her father
continued to interfere in her life. Eventually, she divorced and had to move back
into her father's house, where the cycle of abuse started again.
She
eventually took her son and moved into an abused woman's shelter and started
legal proceedings to strip her father of custody rights over her. In turn, he
brought a case against her for disobedience. Her brother was also named as a
defendant in the case as he supported his sister. Among other things, she was
'accused' of signing a petition calling for women to be allowed to drive. After
the initial charges were dismissed, the angry father tried again. The second
time around he drew a conservative judge who ruled in his favour and Samar
Badawi was imprisoned, without ever facing a proper trial.
She was
freed after a seven-month global campaign and she was given into the custody of
her uncle. Not long after that, she hit the headlines again; this time she
audaciously demanded the right to vote. That was in April 2011: a few months
later the Saudi monarch announced that woman will be given the right to vote
and run in municipal elections as of 2015. Women were also given the right to
be appointed to the Shura Council, a consultative body that advises the king.
Behind the
wheel
Badawi is
now waiting to hear whether the courts will hear her complaint about her
driving licence. "If they don't hear the case, I will demand to know the
reason why," she says. She counters the religious and social arguments
against driving a car with religious and social arguments for women being
allowed to drive: "I am a mother and I work and I don't have my own
chauffeur. Which is more dangerous or more likely to lead to licentious
behaviour, me getting into a car with a complete stranger or me getting behind
the wheel of my own car, by myself?" According to Badawi, men are usually
the spanner in the works: "women want to be independent and drive but the
husband, the father or the brother is afraid of the authorities or what people
will say."
That’s no
longer true of her. She has been supported in all the legal battles by the
human rights lawyer Walied Abou Khair. She has since married him, again against
the wishes of her father. She says, "My husband is my comfort and my
support. When I got behind the wheel of a car on the first big women's driving
action day on 17 June, he encouraged and supported me."
Related Articles:
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Saudi woman driver's lashing 'overturned by king'
Saudi woman to be lashed for defying driving ban
Women in Saudi Arabia to vote and run in elections
Saudi authorities to try woman for driving
Saudi woman driver's lashing 'overturned by king'
Saudi woman to be lashed for defying driving ban
Women in Saudi Arabia to vote and run in elections
"Perceptions of God" – June 6, 2010 (Kryon channeled by Lee Carroll) (Subjects: Quantum Teaching, The Fear of God, Near-death Experience, God Becomes Mythology, Worship, Mastery, Intelligent Design, Benevolent Creator, Global Unity.... etc.) (Text version)
“.. For centuries you haven't been able to think past that box of what God must be like. So you create a Human-like God with wars in heaven, angel strife, things that would explain the devil, fallen angels, pearly gates, lists of dos and don'ts, and many rules still based on cultures that are centuries old. You create golden streets and even sexual pleasures as rewards for men (of course) - all Human perspective, pasted upon God. I want to tell you that it's a lot different than that. I want to remind you that there are those who have seen it! Why don't you ask somebody who has had what you would call a near-death experience?

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