Posts Tagged ‘women’

Prohibited Love

Thursday, February 14th, 2008

Why, it is valentine! The day of crimson red (except, that is, if you live in Riyadh)…

300px-small_red_rose.JPG

Red is Banned till Fri.

Monday, 11 February 2008

By Suzan Zawawi

RIYADH - Agents of the Commission for the Promotion of Virtue and Prevention of Vice visited flower and gift shops in the capital Saturday night to instruct them to remove all red items - from red roses and wrapping paper to boxes and teddy bears - from their shelves, shop workers said.

“They visited us last night,” said a couple of florists Sunday morning.

“They gave us warnings and this morning we packed up all the red itmes and displays.” The florists asked not to be identified.

Sunday was the last day people could buy red roses in Riyadh, until Valentine’s Day on Feb. 14 passes.

Every year, Commission agents visit flower shops a couple of days before Feb. 14 to issue warnings. On the eve of Valentine’s Day, they start their raids and confiscate any red items that are symbols of love, florists here said.

But as a result of the ban, there’s a black market in red roses.

“A single rose costs around SR5-7 but today the same rose costs SR10 a piece and the price will go up to SR20-30 on Valentine’s Day,” said a florist who caters to customers on Valentine’s Day from his apartment.

Loyal customers place orders with the florist days and sometimes weeks before Feb. 14. “Sometimes we deliver the bouquets in the middle of the night or early morning, to avoid suspicion,” said the florist.

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Saudi Arabia to lift ban on women drivers

Wednesday, January 23rd, 2008

By Damien McElroy in Riyadh

Last Updated: 12:01am GMT 21/01/2008

Saudi Arabia is to lift its ban on women drivers in an attempt to stem a rising suffragette-style movement in the deeply conservative state.

Government officials have confirmed the landmark decision and plan to issue a decree by the end of the year.

The move is designed to forestall campaigns for greater freedom by women, which have recently included protesters driving cars through the Islamic state in defiance of a threat of detention and loss of livelihoods.

Women Driving

The royal family has previously balked at granting women driving permits, claiming the step did not have full public support. The driving ban dates back to the establishment of the state in 1932, although recently the government line has weakened.

“There has been a decision to move on this by the Royal Court because it is recognised that if girls have been in schools since the 1960s, they have a capability to function behind the wheel when they grow up,” a government official told The Daily Telegraph. “We will make an announcement soon.”

Abdulaziz bin Salamah, the deputy information minister, said the official reform programme had been dogged by debate over the issue.

“In terms of women driving, we don’t have it now because of the reticence of some segments of society,” he said. “For example, my mother wouldn’t want my sister to drive.

“It’s something she cannot grapple with. But there is change on the way. I think the fair view is that one can be against it but one does not have the right to prevent it.”

If the ban on women driving is lifted, it could be years before the full impact is seen. Practical hurdles stopping women obtaining licences and insurance must be overcome.

Mohammad al-Zulfa, a reformist member of the Saudi consultative Shura Council, which scrutinises official policies in the oil-rich state, said reversing the ban was part of King Abdullah’s “clever” strategy of incremental reform.

“When it was first raised, the extremists were really mad,” he said. “Now they just complain. It is diminishing into a form of consent.”

Saudi Arabia maintains a strict segregation of the sexes outside the family home.

An unaccompanied woman must shop behind curtains and cannot hail a taxi.

Critics believe allowing women to drive would be the first step towards a gradual erosion of the kingdom’s modesty laws. A woman would have to remove the traditional abaya robe to get a clear view behind the wheel.

“Allowing women to drive will only bring sin,” a letter to Al-Watan newspaper declared last year. “The evils it would bring - mixing between the genders, temptations, and tarnishing the reputation of devout Muslim women - outweigh the benefits.”

Saudi women have mounted growing protests. Fouzia al-Ayouni, the country’s most prominent women’s rights campaigner, has risked arrest by leading convoys of women drivers. “We have broken the barrier of fear,” she said. “We want the authorities to know that we’re here, that we want to drive, and that many people feel the way we do.”

Source: Telegraph

Image: Autoblog

The Kingdom of Silence

Monday, November 19th, 2007

Here is a great article by Lawrence Wright. The best written on Saudi Arabia in my opinion. It was originally published in The New Yorker but it is not available on their site any longer (archived) so here is another source:

The Kingdom of Silence

And Just in case it gets removed sometimes in the future, here is the full text…

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How Absurd

Sunday, November 18th, 2007

Sometimes things just go overboard…. way overboard. It seems that, in this country, the idea of women’s rights cannot be allowed to exist even in its most simple form. One got to ask: what’s in a name?

Case in point: Mrs. Vanellis; an international Italian restaurant chain that I have previously tried, and loved, in both Bahrain and UAE, has opened an outlet in Dhahran Mall almost a year ago.

Mrs. Vanellis Logo

Only, there is a little change… in name.

 

Vanellis Saudi Outlet

(Sorry for the crappy mobile pic)

Yep, the (Mrs.) has been dropped from the name for no apparent reason other than the retarded you-cannot-have-a-restaurant-carrying-a-female-name BS, I would presume.