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Saudi King Abdullah
Grants Women Right to Vote, Run in Elections
September 25, 2011
Saudi
Arabia's King Abdullah has granted Saudi women the right to vote and run
in nationwide local elections, four years from now.
The king's announcement Sunday applies to elections set for 2015. The
kingdom holds its next local elections on Thursday, but women are not
allowed to vote or run in those.
King Abdullah also said that women will be appointed the Shura Council
starting with its next term. The Shura Council is an advisory body which
is selected by the monarch and has so far been all male.
Women have fewer rights than men in Saudi Arabia.
Earlier this year, some women in Saudi Arabia drove cars in a defiant
response to the kingdom's traditional ban on women behind the wheel.
There is no written rule in Saudi Arabia barring women from driving,
only fatwas, or religious edicts, stemming from a strict tradition of
Islam called Wahhabism.
Saudi
Arabia's Gulf neighbors Bahrain and the United Arab Emirates held
elections on Saturday. Women made up nearly 20 percent of the candidates
for 20 seats in the UAE's Federal National Council. Preliminary results
show at least one woman won a spot in the 40-seat assembly. UAE rulers
will appoint people to the other half of the seats.
Voter turnout was considered poor in both countries.
The opposition al-Wefaq party in Bahrain called for Bahrainis to boycott
the elections. Bahrainis were voting to fill 18 assembly seats abandoned
by al-Wefaq members who quit in protest over the government’s bloody
crackdown on pro-democracy demonstrations earlier in the year. |