Saudi Arabia now allows women over the age of 21 to obtain passports without seeking the approval of their 'guardians' (AFP Photo/FAYEZ NURELDINE) |
Riyadh (AFP) - Saudi Arabia has eased travel restrictions on women but observers say loopholes still allow male relatives to curtail their movements and, in the worst cases, leave them marooned in prison-like shelters.
In August,
the conservative kingdom allowed women over the age of 21 to obtain passports
without seeking the approval of their "guardians" -— fathers,
husbands or other male relatives.
The move,
part of de facto ruler Crown Prince Mohammed bin Salman's plan to revamp the
national image, ended a longstanding rule that prompted some extreme attempts
to flee the kingdom.
But
campaigners warn it is easy to sidestep the reform.
While
allowing travel documents, Saudi Arabia has not done away with
"taghayyub" -- a legal provision that means "absent" in
Arabic and which has long been used to constrain women who leave home without
permission.
"Guardians
can still file a police complaint that their female relatives are 'absent',
which would lead to their arrest and possible detention in Dar al-Reaya
(women's shelter)," Eman Alhussein, a fellow at the European Council on
Foreign Relations, told AFP.
The system
of shelters operated around the kingdom is opaque but accounts of conditions
there paint a dire picture.
Activists
including Human Rights Watch (HRW) say they are run like detention facilities,
and it is unclear how many women they hold.
Saudi Arabia now allows women over the age of 21 to obtain passports without seeking the approval of their 'guardians' (AFP Photo/FAYEZ NURELDINE) |
"Saudi
(fathers) can't stop the girls getting passports but they can still declare
them missing to local police who will then track them down for the
parents," a Western official told AFP, calling it a "massive
loophole".
Saudi
authorities did not respond to requests for comment.
Last year,
members of the advisory Shura Council recommended the justice ministry stop
accepting taghayyub cases as a way to slowly dismantle the guardianship system,
but the suggestion seems to have been ignored.
Officials
in Riyadh told AFP that dozens of women have applied for passports since the
reform was announced.
"Today,
I came to issue a new passport for the first time in my life," one
40-year-old woman told AFP as she made the application at a government office.
"I am
very happy and this step gives confidence to Saudi women."
The move
was celebrated as a historic leap for gender equality, triggering humorous
online memes featuring women dashing to the airport with suitcases —- alone.
But it also
prompted laments for the perceived loss of men's control, with one social media
portrait showing fully veiled women wriggling underneath a barbed wire fence
and emerging scantily clad on the other side.
A Saudi
woman rolls her suitcase at the departure
hall of the Jeddah Airport (AFP Photo)
|
'Restrict
travel'
Campaigners,
however, say that control is far from lost, with HRW warning that male
guardians could also possibly circumvent the passport reform by seeking a
"court order to restrict female relatives' travel".
Cases of
filial "disobedience" can be filed against adult women -- a crime
that can lead to imprisonment.
Women also
still require a guardian's permission to marry or to be released from prisons
and shelters.
Campaigners
warn even those with valid passports could wind up in Dar al-Reaya.
Two Saudi
women detained there for about a year after fleeing what they called abusive
guardians told AFP they were watched round the clock through surveillance
cameras inside their cells.
They said
inmates were subject to flogging as punishment -- by men.
One said
the shelter in Riyadh also kept a notebook to account for their menstrual
period -- an invasive practice corroborated by HRW -- to ensure they didn't
break rules surrounding Muslim prayers.
A document
from the facility seen by AFP described one of the women as
"frustrated", "rebellious" and seeking to sully her
family's reputation. There was no mention of her guardian's alleged abuse.
"Some
women can stay in these homes for a prolonged period if their guardians fail to
receive them, perhaps as a way to punish them," said Alhussein.
Saudi women
line up to apply for passports in Riyadh City (AFP Photo/
FAYEZ NURELDINE)
|
'Disobedient daughters'
When their
guardians refused to get them out, the two women said they were transferred to
another shelter known as Dar al-Diyafa, or "hospitality home".
They
described it as a dark place with boarded-up windows and depressed women
unclaimed for years. Others made desperate attempts to escape despite tight
security.
Often the
only legal escape is through an arranged marriage —- sometimes to strangers
vetted by the shelter -— a move that transfers guardianship to the husband,
campaigners say.
"Many
women are stuck there for years with some waiting for someone to marry them —-
and men come to the place with specifics such as 'I want a tall girl',"
HRW researcher Rothna Begum told AFP.
Saudi
authorities did not respond to repeated requests for access to the shelters.
The
testimonies underscore how taghayyub -- often a tool against a young generation
of what arch-conservatives call "disobedient daughters" --
effectively obstructs women from breaking free from abusive guardians.
They also
offer clues into why Saudi women alleging abuse undertake perilous attempts to
escape overseas despite the pro-women reforms, including a historic decree
allowing them to drive.
"Women
are free to get passports but guardians still control whether they can leave
their homes," said Alhussein.
No comments:
Post a Comment