Yahoo – AFP,
Ian Timberlake, November 30, 2016
![]() |
| Billionaire Prince Alwaleed bin Talal has Tweeted that Saudi Arabia should end the ban on women driving (AFP Photo/FAYEZ NURELDINE) |
Riyadh
(AFP) - An outspoken billionaire Saudi prince has called for an
"urgent" end to his country's ban on women driving, saying it is a
matter not just of rights but of economic necessity.
"Stop
the debate: Time for women to drive," Prince Alwaleed bin Talal said on
his official Twitter account.
Alwaleed is
an unusually forthright member of Saudi Arabia's extensive royal family.
He holds no
political posts but chairs Kingdom Holding Co., which has interests including
in US banking giant Citigroup and the Euro Disney theme park.
He is a
longtime advocate of women's rights in the conservative Islamic kingdom, which
has some of the world's tightest restrictions on women and is the only country
where they are not allowed to drive.
In
conjunction with his short tweet, Alwaleed's office issued an
uncharacteristically long statement late Tuesday outlining his reasons for
supporting an end to the ban.
"Preventing
a woman from driving a car is today an issue of rights similar to the one that
forbade her from receiving an education or having an independent
identity," Alwaleed said.
"They
are all unjust acts by a traditional society, far more restrictive than what is
lawfully allowed by the precepts of religion."
He also
detailed the "economic costs" of women having to rely on foreign
private drivers or taxis, since public transit is not a viable alternative in
the kingdom.
Using
foreign drivers drains billions of dollars from the Saudi economy, Alwaleed
said.
He
calculated that families spend an average of 3,800 riyals ($1,000/940 euros) a
month on a driver, money which otherwise could help household incomes at a time
when many are making do with less.
Even if
their husbands can take time out to transport the women, that requires
temporarily leaving the office and "undermines the productivity of the
workforce," Alwaleed said.
"Having
women drive has become an urgent social demand predicated upon current economic
circumstances."
The prince
said he is making his call on behalf of those with "limited means".
Activists
say women's driving is not technically illegal but that the ban is linked to
tradition and custom.
Some women
have challenged the prohibition by getting behind the wheel and posting images
of themselves online.
A slow
expansion of women's rights began under the late king Abdullah, who in 2013
named them to the Shura Council which advises cabinet.
Abdullah
also announced that women could for the first time vote and run in municipal
elections, which were held last December.
These and
other decisions were initially opposed by "certain elements" in Saudi
society but soon became accepted, Alwaleed said, calling for "a similarly
decisive" political act.
In April,
Deputy Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman said change cannot be forced, and
"it is up to Saudi society."
In
Alwaleed's view, however, "what cannot be allowed is to have one segment
imposing its preferences on the rest of society."
Sahar
Hassan Nasief, a women's rights activist in the Red Sea city of Jeddah, said
the appeal from such an influential figure could help to bring about change.
"Everybody's
talking about him," she told AFP. "I think his comments gave us a lot
of hope."
A Saudi
woman gets into a taxi at a mall in Riyadh
|
Related Article:
"Listening to the Voice of Spirit" (2) - Feb 20, 2016 (Kryon Channelling by Lee Carroll) - (DNA Efficiency is on average at 35 percent now) - (Text version)
“… With free choice, the percentage of DNA efficiently started to go down as humanity grew. As soon as the DNA started to lose percentage, the gender balance was dysfunctional. If you want to have a test of any society, anywhere on the planet, and you want to know the DNA percentage number [consciousness quota] as a society, there's an easy test: How do they perceive and treat their women? The higher the DNA functionality, the more the feminine divine is honored. This is the test! Different cultures create different DNA consciousness, even at the same time on the planet. So you can have a culture on Earth at 25 percent and one at 37 - and if you did, they would indeed clash. …”
“… You're at 35. There's an equality here, you're starting to see the dark and light, and it's changing everything. You take a look at history and you've come a long way, but it took a long time to get here. Dear ones, we've seen this process before and the snowball is rolling. There isn't anything in the way that's going to stop it. In the path of this snowball of higher consciousness are all kinds of things that will be run over and perish. Part of this is what you call "the establishment". Watch for some very big established things to fall over! The snowball will simply knock them down. …”


No comments:
Post a Comment
Note: Only a member of this blog may post a comment.