Kvinnor ska tillåtas köra mc och lastbilar i Saudiarabien
Kvinnor i Saudiarabien kommer tillåtas att köra lastbilar och motorcyklar, skriver AFP. Beskedet kommer tre månader efter att det konservativa kungariket i ett historiskt beslut meddelat att förbudet för kvinnor att köra bil upphävs. Bilkörning kommer att vara tillåten från och med juni nästa år. Beslutet om att tillåta kvinnor att köra även andra fordon gavs under fredagen, i samband med att detaljer i den nya lagen preciserades.
Saudiarabien är det enda land i världen som har haft en lag som förbjudit kvinnor från att köra bil.
bakgrund
Kvinnors rättigheter i Saudiarabien
Wikipedia (en)
Women's rights in Saudi Arabia are limited in comparison to the rights of women in many of its neighbors. The World Economic Forum's 2016 Global Gender Gap Report ranked Saudi Arabia 141 out of 144 countries for gender parity, down from 134 out of 145 in 2015. The United Nations Economic and Social Council (ECOSOC) elected Saudi Arabia to the U.N. Commission on the Status of Women for 2018–2022. Women in Saudi Arabia constituted 13% of the country's native workforce as of 2015.
However, the status of women has changed in recent decades. Women were previously forbidden from voting in all elections or being elected to any political office, but in 2011 King Abdullah let women vote in the 2015 local elections, as well as to be appointed to the Consultative Assembly. There are more female university graduates in Saudi Arabia than male, and female literacy is estimated to be 91%, which while still lower than male literacy, is far higher than it was 40 years ago. The average age at first marriage among Saudi females is 25 years.
500 conservative Saudi women attending a 2006 conference in Riyadh did not support loosening traditional gender roles and restrictions, on the grounds that Saudi Arabia is the closest thing to an "ideal and pure Islamic nation," and under threat from "imported Western values".
Among the factors that define rights for women in Saudi Arabia are government laws, the Hanbali and Wahhabi interpretation of Sunni Islam, and traditional customs of the Arabian Peninsula. In 2017, King Salman ordered that women be allowed access to government services such as education and healthcare without the need of consent of her guardian.
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