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Saudi women get the vote
Maybe they will catch up one day. Via Melanie Phillips. Slightly EFL.
Saudi Arabia, one of the worldâs most male-dominated countries, is preparing to break with tradition and risk the wrath of religious conservatives by allowing women to take part in its first elections. Plans for municipal elections, a key step towards modernisation and democracy, were announced in October, but the government gave no public indication of whether women would be included as voters or as candidates. Saudi officials said privately at the time that they wanted to introduce womenâs suffrage but hoped to slip it through quietly at a later date to avoid a conservative backlash. Public confirmation came yesterday, in a press release from the Saudi embassy in London. A paragraph describing the election plans said: "It is believed both men and women will be given the opportunity to vote."
Saleh al-Malik, a member of the Shura Council, the kingdomâs non-elected parliament, confirmed that women would be allowed to take part, though the government is taking a cautious approach. He said anyone aged over 21 would be entitled to vote. Although the law will not state explicitly that women can vote, "there will be no clause saying that women are not eligible to vote or be elected", he said. The elections are expected to be held in late October. Voters in 180 municipalities will be asked to choose between four and 16 councillors, depending on population size. The electoral law is not expected to be approved until August, giving opponents little time to organise a rearguard action.
Pressure for change has built up as increasing numbers of Saudi women take up employment. About 10% of private businesses are now believed to be run by women - a situation that would have been unimaginable a generation ago. In an unprecedented move last year, 300 Saudi women signed a petition calling on the countryâs de facto ruler, Crown Prince Abdullah, to recognise their legal and civil rights. Rejecting womenâs suffrage would leave Saudi Arabia exposed to international criticism. Elsewhere in the Arab world, women vote in almost all the countries that hold elections. Women do not vote in Kuwait. Although the emir wanted them to vote and stand as candidates, conservative elements in parliament blocked the move. Among the arguments used against womenâs participation is that menstruation could cloud their political judgment.
Posted by: Bulldog 2004-03-10 |
http://www.rantburg.com/poparticle.php?ID=27816 |
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