Saudi king allows women to vote in local elections
RIYADH, Saudi Arabia (AP) - September 25, 2011
In an annual speech before his advisory assembly, or Shura
Council, the Saudi monarch said he ordered the step after
consulting with the nation's top religious clerics, whose advice
carries great weight in the kingdom.
"We refuse to marginalize the role of women in Saudi society
and in every aspect, within the rules of Sharia," Abdullah said,
referring to the Islamic law that governs many aspects of life in
the kingdom.
The right to vote is by far the biggest change introduced by
Abdullah, considered a reformer, since he became the country's de
facto ruler in 1995 during the illness of King Fahd. Abdullah
formally ascended to the throne upon Fahd's death in August 2005.
The kingdom's great oil wealth and generous handouts to citizens
have largely insulated it from the unrest sweeping the Arab world.
But the king has taken steps to quiet rumblings of discontent that
largely centered on the eastern oil-producing region populated by
the country's Shiite Muslim minority.
Mindful of the unrest, which reached Saudi Arabia's doorstep
with street protests and a deadly crackdown in neighboring Bahrain,
King Abdullah pledged roughly $93 billion in financial support to
boost jobs and services for Saudis in March.
Seizing on the season of protest in the Arab world, Saudi
women's groups have also staged public defiance of the kingdom's
ban on female driving. Saudi authorities went relatively easy on
the women, who took to the roads earlier this year and gained
worldwide attention through social media.
Abdullah said the changes announced Sunday would also allow
women to be appointed to the Shura Council, the advisory body
selected by the king that is currently all-male.
The council, established in 1993, offers opinions on general
policies in the kingdom and debates economic and social development
plans and agreements signed between the kingdom and other nations.
Saudi Arabia, the birthplace of Islam, follows deeply
conservative social traditions and adheres closely to a strict
version of Islam. Despite Abdullah's attempts to push through some
social reforms, women still cannot drive and the sexes are
segregated in public.
Saudi Arabia held its first-ever municipal elections in 2005.
The kingdom will hold its next municipal elections on Thursday,
but women will not be able to vote or run in those contests.
In announcing the reforms, Abdullah sought to ground his
decision in religion.
"Muslim women in our Islamic history have demonstrated
positions that expressed correct opinions and advice," he said,
citing examples from the era of Islam's Prophet Muhammad in the
seventh century.
He said the members of Saudi Arabia's clerical council, or
Ulema, praised and supported his decision.
He also acknowledged the yearning for greater social freedoms in
the kingdom.
"Balanced modernization, which falls within our Islamic values,
is an important demand in an era where there is no place for
defeatist or hesitant people," he said.
In January, a group of female activists launched a campaign on
social networking websites to push the kingdom to allow women to
vote and run in the municipal elections.
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Youssef reported from Cairo.