Road-ready

First Saudi women get driver’s licenses

Kingdom detains 17 activists, including campaigners for women’s right to drive, despite lifting of ban set for June 24

Illustrative: A Saudi woman tours a car showroom for women in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, on January 11, 2018. (AFP/Amer Hilabi)
Illustrative: A Saudi woman tours a car showroom for women in Jeddah, Saudi Arabia, on January 11, 2018. (AFP/Amer Hilabi)

RIYADH, Saudi Arabia — Saudi Arabia on Monday began issuing its first driver’s licenses to women in decades, state media reported.

“The first group of women today received their Saudi driving licenses,” the official Saudi Press Agency said.

“The general directorate of traffic started replacing international driving licenses recognized in the kingdom with Saudi licenses,” it added.

The move comes as Saudi Arabia, the only country in the world where women are not allowed drive, prepares to lift its decades-long ban on female drivers on June 24.

SPA said authorities started swapping international licenses for Saudi ones in multiple locations across the kingdom, with women applicants made to undergo a “practical test.”

It did not specify the number of licenses issued.

Razan, right, sits for the first time in the driver’s seat, with her trainer Francesca Pardini, an Italian ex-race car driver, during training sponsored by Ford Motor, in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, March 6, 2018.(AP Photo/Amr Nabil)

The move is part of Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman’s far-reaching liberalization drive as he seeks to modernize the conservative petro-state.

The self-styled reformer, who recently undertook a global tour aimed at reshaping his kingdom’s austere image, has sought to break with long-held restrictions on women and the mixing of the genders.

But casting a shadow on the reforms, Saudi Arabia last week said it detained 17 people for “undermining” the kingdom’s security, in what campaigners have dubbed a sweeping crackdown against activists.

Rights groups have identified many of the detainees as women campaigners for the right to drive and to end the conservative Islamic country’s male guardianship system.

Authorities said eight of the detainees had been “temporarily released” until their investigation is completed.

Nine suspects, including four women, remain in custody after they “confessed” to a slew of charges such as suspicious contact with “hostile” organizations and recruiting people in sensitive government positions, according to SPA.

Authorities accused the detainees of “coordinated activity undermining the security and stability of the kingdom.”

Previous reports in state-backed media branded some of the detainees traitors and “agents of embassies.”

Campaigners have dismissed the reports as a “smear” campaign. The crackdown has also sparked a torrent of global criticism.

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