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Saudi Council Reportedly Recommends Allowing Women To Drive

A Saudi woman poses in this picture to illustrate driving a car in Jeddah in June 2011 as part of a protest. An advisory council has recommended for the first time lifting a ban on women drivers.
Susan Baaghil Reuters/Landov
A Saudi woman poses in this picture to illustrate driving a car in Jeddah in June 2011 as part of a protest. An advisory council has recommended for the first time lifting a ban on women drivers.

In an unprecedented move, a Saudi advisory council says it approves of lifting a ban on women drivers. The Shura Council proposes that certain restrictions be applied, however: women must be at least 30, have permission from their male guardian, not wear makeup and drive only in daylight hours, The Associated Press reports.

For years, the kingdom has refused to review the ban on women drivers, which is unique to Saudi Arabia, where conservative Muslim clerics are worried have said women drivers could spread "licentiousness."

The AP reports:

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"The Shura Council's recommendations are not obligatory on the government. But simply making the recommendation was a startling shift after years of the kingdom staunchly rejecting any review of the ban. "The council member told The Associated Press that the Shura Council made the recommendations in a secret, closed session held in the past month. The member spoke on condition of anonymity because the recommendations had not been made public."

As The Two-Way's Bill Chappell reported last year, there have been a number of bold protests against the ban, with Saudi women getting behind the wheel for a day. Thousands have signed online protests against the ban. The October 2013 protest highlighted by Bill was the third of its kind since 1990.

The AP says that the Shura Council recommended that women 30 and older be allowed to drive until 8 p.m. each day if they have permission from a male guardian. They would be allowed to drive from 7 a.m. to 8 p.m. on Saturday through Wednesday and noon to 8 p.m. Thursday and Friday, the Muslim weekend.

The council is also recommending a "female traffic department" made up of women officers to deal with female drivers, the AP says.

Copyright 2014 NPR. To see more, visit http://www.npr.org/.

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