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Saudi Arabia arrested activists who campaigned for women's rights to drive just weeks before lifting a ban on driving

May 21, 2018, 13:07 IST

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A student at the female-only campus of Effat University, sits for the first time in the driver's seat, during training sponsored by Ford Motor, in Jiddah, Saudi Arabia, Tuesday, March 6, 2018. A stunning royal decree issued last year by King Salman announcing that women would be allowed to drive in 2018 upended one of the most visible forms of discrimination against women in Saudi Arabia.AP Photo/Amr Nabil

  • Authorities in Saudi Arabia detained several women's rights activists who campaigned for women's driving rights just weeks before the country is set to lift the ban on women driving.
  • At least seven women's prominent rights activists have been arrested in the last week and 12 have been arrested in total. 
  • Saudi Arabia is set to lift its driving restriction on June 24.


Authorities in Saudi Arabia detained several women's rights activists who campaigned for women's driving rights just weeks before the country is set to lift its ban.

At least seven women's prominent rights activists have been arrested since May 15, Human Rights Watch reported. Many of those arrested had participated participated in previous campaigns aimed at allowing women the right to drive, according to the Wall Street Journal.

The government first announced it would lift its ban on women driving in September, and is set to come into effect on June 24. Critics of the ban say it is symbolic of Saudi Arabia's strong patriarchal society, an image which Crown Prince Mohammed Bin Salman is rapidly trying to change.

And while the nation was celebrating the abolishment of the ban, the government was doubling down on activists who had fought for the right.

Activists told the Journal that on the day of the announcement they received calls from the Saudi government banning them from speaking to the media or even praising the move. 

"We were told: 'Don't talk. We don't want you to comment positively or negatively. Don't do it, don't give interviews,"' an unnamed activist told the Journal.

Activists told the Journal that the recent crackdown is aimed at preventing anyone from claiming credit for the government's decision to lift the ban.

"They put pressure on the government and the government is still angry, even if it has accepted that women will be allowed to drive," another activist told the Journal. "Women will drive soon, and they don't want anyone who can comment."

Among those detained this week are Loujain al-Hathloul, a young activist who spent 73 days in jail for defying the ban in 2014.

Twelve people were arrested in total.

Saudi's Press Agency said the activists were arrested for having "dared to violate the country's religious and national pillars through making suspected contacts in support of the activities of foreign circles." The statement also said those detained sought to "destabilize the Kingdom."

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